- Nvidia leaves the main floor, but kidnaps the focus with AI machines with Grace Blackwell
- NVIDIA DGX SPARK offers 1,000 tops on a mini PC that is aimed at developers and coders of serious AIs
- The NVIDIA DGX station has a 72 -core CPU and a GPU HBM3E 288GB memory
In Computex 2025, Nvidia took an unconventional route when avoiding the floor of the main exhibition and, instead, organizing its own “Gtc Taipei” event in a nearby hotel.
There, the CEO of Nvidia, Jensen Huang, delivered a trio of key speeches in the event, presenting a new Hardware focused on AI. Among the largest ads were two devices: the DGX Spark, a compact mini PC aimed at IA developers and the DGX station, a more powerful work station class system.
Although Nvidia brand units were exhibited, the real surprise was the range of OEM partners who joined the initiative, with 11 models expected in the spark and station lines.
Nvidia DGX Spark
The DGX Spark is built around the new CPU NVIDIA GB10 Grace Blackwell, which combines a 20-core arm CPU developed with MediaTak (with 10 Cortex-X295 and 10 Cortex-X725) nuclei and a GPU based on Nvidia Blackwell architecture.
Designed for developers, the device offers up to 1,000 tops (FP4/SPars) ships with a Linux -based DGX operating system, NVIDIA’s development suite also used on its data centers platforms such as Blackwell and Hopper.
Several partners, including Acer, Asus, Dell, Gigabyte, HP, Lenovo and MSI, had display models. At first glance, however, the only visible differences were in external design.
Internal disassembled during the event were not allowed, raising a valid question: how different these OEM versions are beyond aesthetics?
Although the DGX Spark promises to be a strong contender for the title of the best mobile work station for the development of AI, potential buyers may want to expect detailed reviews before making a purchase.
NVIDIA DGX station
The DGX station, more directly aimed at professionals who need high -end work station PC, presents the GB300 Grace Blackwell Ultra Desktop Superchip.
It is equipped with 288 GB of HBM3E memory in the GPU and a CPU V2 Neaves of 72 cores combined with 496 GB of RAM LPDDR5X, which makes it away from an ordinary desk.
Like the spark, it is executed in the DGX operating system and admits the Nvidia complete development battery.
The DGX station board shown in the exhibition was a model, although the real product was shown during a separate session.
Even so, there are questions about how finished are the systems, especially because complete availability is not expected until the end of 2025.
In particular, the DGX station will only be available through OEM, with Asus, Gigabyte, MSI and Supermicro leading the deployment.
This fragmented distribution model could introduce a variation in construction quality and thermal performance, critical factors for users looking for the best work station PC.
Through PCWatch