During the Nvidia GTX keynote on Tuesday, CEO Jensen Huang revealed two “personal AI supercomputers” named DGX Spark
and DGX station “Project DIGITS” both powered by Grace Blackwell. Five major PC manufacturers are building the supercomputers. “bridge systems” These systems, which were first shown as
back in January, are designed to provide AI capabilities to developers and researchers who need to prototype, fine tune, and run large AI model locally. DGX systems are standalone desktop AI labs, or”https://nvidianews.nvidia.com/news/nvidia-announces-dgx-spark-and-dgx-station-personal-ai-computers”which allows AI developers to move models from desktops to DGX Cloud and other AI cloud infrastructures with little code changes.Huang explains the rationale for these new products.
“> News release
stating that the smaller DGX Spark has a GB10 Grace Blackwell Superchip, with Blackwell GPU, and fifth-generation Tensor Cores. This chip can perform up to 1,000 trillion AI operations per second.
The more powerful DGX station includes the GB300 Grace Blackwell Superchip with 784GB coherent memory and ConnectX-8 SuperNIC, supporting networking speeds of up to 800Gb/s.
DGX architecture is a prototype for other manufacturers to produce. Asus, Dell HP and Lenovo will sell and develop both DGX systems. DGX Spark reservations open today, while DGX Station is expected to be available later in 2025. BOXX Lambda and Supermicro are also manufacturing partners of the DGX station, with systems due to be available in later this year. Nvidia didn’t mention pricing because the systems are being manufactured by different companies. Nvidia did mention in January that the base configuration for a DGX Spark computer would retail at around $3,000