Nvidia Project Digits Explained: AI Power in a Compact Package
NVIDIA's Project DIGITS is a compact AI supercomputer launching in May 2025, priced at $3,000, offering petaflop-class performance and supporting models with up to 200 billion parameters.
Read original articleNVIDIA has unveiled Project DIGITS, a compact AI supercomputer powered by the new GB10 Grace Blackwell Superchip, which offers petaflop-class AI performance for $3,000. Set to launch in May 2025, Project DIGITS is designed to enhance the AI development workflow for researchers, data scientists, and students by enabling them to prototype and deploy large AI models directly from their desktops. The system can handle 200 billion-parameter models and features a combination of an NVIDIA Blackwell GPU and a Grace CPU, connected via NVLink-C2C for efficient communication. Each unit includes 128GB of unified memory and up to 4TB of NVMe storage, with the capability to link two systems for even larger models. Project DIGITS operates on a Linux-based NVIDIA DGX OS and integrates with NVIDIA’s ecosystem, providing access to a wide range of software tools and libraries. This initiative aims to democratize AI supercomputing, making advanced AI capabilities accessible to a broader audience, thus fostering innovation in generative AI, large language models, and agentic AI applications.
- Project DIGITS is a compact AI supercomputer offering petaflop-class performance.
- It is powered by the NVIDIA GB10 Grace Blackwell Superchip and will be available in May 2025.
- The system can run models with up to 200 billion parameters and includes 128GB of memory.
- It integrates with NVIDIA’s software ecosystem, supporting popular AI development tools.
- The price point is set at $3,000, aimed at making AI supercomputing accessible to more users.
Related
Nvidia's Project Digits is a 'personal AI supercomputer'
Nvidia's Project Digits, a compact personal AI supercomputer, features the GB10 Grace Blackwell Superchip, offers up to a petaflop performance, and targets AI researchers, priced at $3,000 from May 2025.
Nvidia announces $3k personal AI supercomputer called Digits
Nvidia's Project Digits, a $3,000 personal AI supercomputer, launches in May 2025, featuring 200 billion parameter capacity, 1 petaflop performance, and support for popular AI frameworks, enhancing accessibility.
Nvidia Project Digits
NVIDIA's Project DIGITS features a compact AI supercomputer with the Grace Blackwell Superchip, delivering a petaflop of performance, 128GB memory, and supporting large AI models for developers.
Thanks to Nvidia, there's a new generation of PCs coming and they'll run Linux
Nvidia's Project DIGITS introduces a Linux-based desktop with a Grace Blackwell Superchip, targeting mainstream users and challenging Intel and AMD, with consumer products expected to launch later this year.
Nvidia might do for desktop AI what it did for desktop gaming
NVIDIA's CES keynote introduced 'Project Digits,' a $3,000 home AI supercomputer for local processing of advanced models, targeting data scientists and researchers, contingent on user-friendly software development for success.
Related
Nvidia's Project Digits is a 'personal AI supercomputer'
Nvidia's Project Digits, a compact personal AI supercomputer, features the GB10 Grace Blackwell Superchip, offers up to a petaflop performance, and targets AI researchers, priced at $3,000 from May 2025.
Nvidia announces $3k personal AI supercomputer called Digits
Nvidia's Project Digits, a $3,000 personal AI supercomputer, launches in May 2025, featuring 200 billion parameter capacity, 1 petaflop performance, and support for popular AI frameworks, enhancing accessibility.
Nvidia Project Digits
NVIDIA's Project DIGITS features a compact AI supercomputer with the Grace Blackwell Superchip, delivering a petaflop of performance, 128GB memory, and supporting large AI models for developers.
Thanks to Nvidia, there's a new generation of PCs coming and they'll run Linux
Nvidia's Project DIGITS introduces a Linux-based desktop with a Grace Blackwell Superchip, targeting mainstream users and challenging Intel and AMD, with consumer products expected to launch later this year.
Nvidia might do for desktop AI what it did for desktop gaming
NVIDIA's CES keynote introduced 'Project Digits,' a $3,000 home AI supercomputer for local processing of advanced models, targeting data scientists and researchers, contingent on user-friendly software development for success.