
SAN JOSE, CA (GTC), Mar 19, 2025 – NVIDIA unveiled NVIDIA DGX personal AI supercomputers powered by the NVIDIA Grace Blackwell platform.
DGX Spark, formerly Project DIGITS, and DGX Station, a new NVIDIA Grace Blackwell desktop supercomputer powered by the NVIDIA Blackwell Ultra platform, enable AI developers, researchers, data scientists, and students to prototype, fine-tune, and infer large models on desktops. Users can run these models locally or deploy them on NVIDIA DGX Cloud or any other accelerated cloud or data center infrastructure.
“AI has transformed every layer of the computing stack. It stands to reason a new class of computers would emerge – designed for AI-native developers and to run AI-native applications,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “With these new DGX personal AI computers, AI can span from cloud services to desktop and edge applications.”
Igniting Innovation with DGX Spark

DGX Spark is a compact AI supercomputer designed to help researchers, data scientists, robotics developers, and students explore generative and physical AI with high performance and advanced features.
At the heart of DGX Spark is the NVIDIA GB10 Grace Blackwell Superchip, optimized for a desktop form factor. GB10 features a powerful NVIDIA Blackwell GPU with fifth-generation Tensor Cores and FP4 support, delivering up to 1,000 trillion operations per second of AI computing for fine-tuning and inference with the latest AI reasoning models, including the NVIDIA Cosmos Reason world foundation model and NVIDIA GR00T N1 robot foundation model.
The GB10 Superchip uses NVIDIA NVLink-C2C interconnect technology to deliver a CPU+GPU-coherent memory model with 5x the bandwidth of fifth-generation PCIe. This lets the superchip access data between a GPU and CPU to optimize performance for memory-intensive AI developer workloads.
NVIDIA’s AI platform enables DGX Spark users to transfer their models from desktops to DGX Cloud or other accelerated infrastructure with minimal code adjustments. This simplifies the process of testing, refining, and improving workflows.
Full Speed Ahead with DGX Station
NVIDIA DGX Station brings data-center-level performance to desktops for AI development. The DGX Station is the first desktop system powered by the NVIDIA GB300 Grace Blackwell Ultra Desktop Superchip. It features 784GB of unified memory to support large-scale training and inference tasks. The GB300 Superchip combines an NVIDIA Blackwell Ultra GPU with advanced Tensor Cores and FP4 precision. It connects to a high-speed NVIDIA Grace CPU through NVLink-C2C, ensuring efficient communication and performance.
The DGX Station is equipped with the NVIDIA ConnectX-8 SuperNIC, designed to enhance AI computing tasks. Supporting network speeds up to 800Gb/s, the ConnectX-8 SuperNIC enables fast and efficient network connections. This allows multiple DGX Stations to work together on larger workloads and speeds up data transfers for AI applications.
Teams can achieve desktop AI development by combining these state-of-the-art DGX Station capabilities with the NVIDIA CUDA-X AI platform.
In addition, users gain access to NVIDIA NIM microservices with the NVIDIA AI Enterprise software platform, which offers optimized, easy-to-deploy inference microservices backed by enterprise support.
Availability
Reservations for DGX Spark systems are open now.
DGX Station will be available from manufacturing partners like ASUS, BOXX, Dell, HP, Lambda, and Supermicro later this year.
Source: NVIDIA
About NVIDIA
NVIDIA Corp. is an American tech company headquartered in Santa Clara, CA. Renowned for designing and manufacturing graphics processing units (GPUs), NVIDIA’s innovations have significantly impacted various sectors. The company’s products and services cater to industries such as gaming, where its GPUs enhance visual experiences; artificial intelligence (AI), providing high-performance computing solutions; automotive, contributing to autonomous vehicle technologies; and robotics, offering advanced AI perception and simulation tools. Over its more than three decades in business, NVIDIA has experienced substantial growth. In the fiscal quarter ending January 2025, the company reported record revenue of $39.3 billion and a net income of $22.1 billion. NVIDIA’s headquarters, designed to facilitate a flat organizational structure, emphasizes information flow and harmony between leadership and employees.