
During Nvidia GTX Keynote on Tuesday, CEO Jensen Huang unveiled two of the so -called “personal giant computers” called DGX Spark and DGX, both of whom are supported by the Grace Blackweell platform. In some way, it is a new type of AI PC structure specifically designed to operate nervous networks, and five major manufacturers will make computers.
These desktop systems, which were preferred for the first time as “project numbers” in January, aim to bring the capabilities of artificial intelligence to developers, researchers and data scientists who need the initial model, control it, and operate the largest Amnesty International models locally. DGX systems can serve as independent desktop laboratories or “bridge systems” that allow artificial intelligence developers to transfer their models from desktop to DGX Cloud or any Amnesty International’s infrastructure with little changes in software instructions.
Huang explanation is the logical basis behind these new products in A. press releaseHe said: “Artificial intelligence has transformed every layer of the computing group. It makes sense to show a new category of computers-designer of the original developers of artificial intelligence and the operation of the original applications of Amnesty International.”
The younger DGX spark is characterized by GB10 Grace Blackwell Superchep, with GPU Blackwell and Generation Generation Tensor, as it offers up to 1000 trillion per second for AI.
Meanwhile, the most powerful DGX station includes Superchip Grace Grace Blackwell Ultra Deskip with 784 GB of coherent memory and Supernic Connectx-8 to 800 GB/s.
DGX works as an initial model that other manufacturers can produce. ASUS, Dell, HP and Lenovo will develop and sell both DGX systems, with the opening of DGX Spark reservations today and DGX STATION later in 2025. The additional manufacturing partners of the DGX Boxx, Lambda and SuperMicro station, with systems later expected this year.
Since the systems will be manufactured by different companies, the NVIDIA unit did not mention the units. However, in January, NVIDIA reported that the basis composition of a Spark computer will sell it for about 3000 dollars.