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H2O.ai H2OVL Mississippi models Shatter Milestone with Over One Million downloads monthly - Launching Momentum into GTC 2026

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H2O.ai H2OVL Mississippi models Shatter Milestone with Over One Million downloads monthly - Launching Momentum into GTC 2026
News

News

H2O.ai H2OVL Mississippi models Shatter Milestone with Over One Million downloads monthly - Launching Momentum into GTC 2026

2026-03-16 18:36 Last Updated At:19:00

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Mar 16, 2026--

H2O.ai, a pioneer in sovereign AI and the world’s leading agentic, highly accurate predictive AI company, today announced its openly available H2OVL Mississippi visual-language multimodal models has reached a significant milestone: surpassing over a million downloads monthly — a breakthrough moment arriving just as the global AI community heads into NVIDIA GTC 2026.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260316156462/en/

The H2OVL Mississippi models, hosted on Hugging Face, have rapidly emerged as one of the most adopted open multimodal OCR‑capable models in the ecosystem, matching leading category performers such as Qwen, DeepSeek, and Google’s Gemma (as publicly benchmarked). This surge in adoption reflects an accelerating movement toward sovereign, open, transparent, and locally deployable AI models — a direction H2O.ai has championed for more than a decade.

“Crossing the million‑download mark is more than a metric — it’s a signal. Sovereign AI is now mainstream,” said the H2O.ai leadership team.

Key Features of H2OVL Mississippi 2B and 0.8B

A New Leader in the AI Race

According to the FutureX February 2026 Overall Leaderboard, H2O.ai’s standout performance where the company leads the field with 59.1%, outperforming every major AI developers, including OpenAI, DeepSeek, Qwen, Google, and xAI. This positions H2O.ai as the top‑ranked AI model ecosystem in the world, strengthening the company’s momentum as the industry converges at GTC.

Gartner Recognizes H2O.ai as a Visionary - For the Third Consecutive Year

Adding to the excitement, Gartner has recognized H2O.ai as a Visionary in the 2025 Gartner® Magic Quadrant™ for Data Science and Machine Learning Platforms for the third year in a row, noting the company’s completeness of vision and ability to execute.

Gartner highlights H2O.ai’s strengths in:

This repeated recognition reinforces H2O.ai’s leadership in secure, enterprise‑grade, mission‑aligned AI.

About H2O.ai

Founded in 2012, H2O.ai is on a mission to democratize AI. As the world’s leading agentic AI company, H2O.ai converges Generative and Predictive AI to help enterprises and public sector agencies develop purpose-built GenAI applications on their private data. With a focus on Sovereign AI—secure, compliant, and infrastructure-flexible deployments—H2O.ai delivers solutions that align with the highest standards of data privacy and control.

Its open-source technology is trusted by over 20,000 organizations worldwide, including more than half of the Fortune 500. H2O.ai powers AI transformation for companies like AT&T, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Certis, Chipotle, Workday, Progressive Insurance, and NIH.

H2O.ai partners include NVIDIA, Dell Technologies, Deloitte, Ernst & Young (EY), Snowflake, AWS, Google Cloud Platform (GCP), VAST Data and MinIO. H2O.ai’s AI for Good program supports nonprofit groups, foundations, and communities in advancing education, healthcare, and environmental conservation. With a vibrant community of 2 million data scientists worldwide, H2O.ai aims to co-create valuable AI applications for all users.

H2O.ai has raised $256 million from investors, including Commonwealth Bank, NVIDIA, Goldman Sachs, Wells Fargo, Capital One, Nexus Ventures and New York Life.

For more information, visit www.h2o.ai.

Figure 1: Magic Quadrant for Data Science and Machine Learning Platforms

Figure 1: Magic Quadrant for Data Science and Machine Learning Platforms

FutureX Overall Leaderboard, February, 2026

FutureX Overall Leaderboard, February, 2026

BRUSSELS (AP) — The European Union is seeking more strategic clarity about the U.S. and Israel’s plans for Iran and when the conflict might end as the bloc weighs whether to send ships to help shore up security in the Persian Gulf.

“It is in our interest to keep the Strait of Hormuz open, and that’s why we are also discussing what we can do in this regard from the European side,” Kaja Kallas, the EU’s foreign policy chief, said Monday ahead of a meeting of the 27-nation bloc’s foreign ministers in Brussels.

U.S. President Donald Trump has asked allies — including France, China, Japan, South Korea and Britain — to help secure the strait for global shipping.

Kallas said the EU could expand its Operation Aspides naval mission to protect shipping in the Red Sea up into the Persian Gulf, or it could form a “coalition of the willing” with member nations contributing military capacity on an ad hoc basis.

The war in Iran, sparked on Feb. 28 airstrikes by Israel and the U.S., has driven up energy prices worldwide, with brent crude up more than 40%. But the conflict has also disrupted the wider global supply chain beyond oil, affecting everything from pharmaceuticals from India, semiconductors from Asia and oil-derived products like fertilizers that come from the Middle East.

Cargo ships are stuck in the Gulf or making a much longer detour around the southern tip of Africa. Planes carrying air cargo out of the Middle East are grounded. And the longer the war drags on, the more likely that there will be shortages and price increases on a wide range of goods.

France has said it is working with countries — President Emmanuel Macron mentioned partners in Europe, India and Asia — on a possible international mission to escort ships through the strait but has stressed it must be when “the circumstances permit,” when fighting has subsided.

French senior officials, speaking anonymously on ongoing talks, said The Netherlands, Italy, and Greece had shown interest and that Spain might be involved in some way.

Outside the EU, the U.K. may also be part of it if they have some capabilities available, the officials said. They mentioned the Red Sea-focused Operation Aspides as a possible model for a naval mission to the Persian Gulf.

German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul said it will be important for the U.S. and Israel to define “when they consider the military aims of their deployment to have been reached.”

He said before meeting his EU colleagues in Brussels that “we need more clarity here” from the U.S. and Israel.

At the same time, Wadephul said the Iranian government poses a significant danger to the region, the freedom of shipping and the global economy, and “this danger definitely must not continue.” He said he would back sanctions against those responsible for blocking the Strait of Hormuz, without elaborating.

Once there’s clarity on the U.S.-Israeli aims, Wadephul said it will be time to enter a phase in which “a security architecture for this whole region” is defined. He said that will also entail speaking to Iran.

Luxembourg Foreign Minister Xavier Bettel said the EU remains uncommitted to any military action.

“The fact is, for the moment, the EU is not directly part of the situation. So we need to decide if we are going to be part or not. That’s an important decision," Bettel said.

Operation Aspides was formed to thwart attacks to shipping in the Red Sea by Somali pirates and Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels, who have yet to join the current fray. Saudi Aramco manages a pipeline network that bypasses the Strait of Hormuz to deliver oil to the Red Sea port city of Yanbu.

“If we want to have security in this region, then it would be easiest to actually already use the operation that we have in the region and maybe change a bit,” Kallas she said. “There is also talk of coalition of the willing in this regard, but we also need to see what could be the fastest to provide this opening for the Strait of Hormuz, but of course, as you can see, it’s not easy.”

The EU is anxious that a potential refugee crisis in Iran will develop if the war continues.

“Although for now, the conflict has not translated into immediate migratory flows toward the EU, what the future holds remains unclear and necessitates the full mobilization of every migration diplomacy tool we have at our disposal,” said European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in a statement Sunday.

Estonian Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna said that his country has been a staunch supporter of the U.S., but that it needs to “know as well what are the plans...in the region.”

He said U.S. allies in Europe want to understand Trump’s “strategic goals. What will be the plan?”

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Associated Press writers Geir Moulson in Berlin and Sylive Corbet in Paris contributed to this report.

Germany's Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul speaks with the media as he arrives for a meeting of EU foreign ministers at the European Council building in Brussels, Monday, March 16, 2026. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)

Germany's Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul speaks with the media as he arrives for a meeting of EU foreign ministers at the European Council building in Brussels, Monday, March 16, 2026. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)

European Union foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas speaks with the media as she arrives for a meeting of EU foreign ministers at the European Council building in Brussels, Monday, March 16, 2026. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)

European Union foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas speaks with the media as she arrives for a meeting of EU foreign ministers at the European Council building in Brussels, Monday, March 16, 2026. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)

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