NVIDIA has introduced the personal supercomputer Project Digits with AI, priced at $3000.
Following the RTX 50 graphics cards, NVIDIA also showcased Project Digits at CES 2025. This personal supercomputer with artificial intelligence provides access to the Grace Blackwell hardware platform in a compact form factor.
Project Digits will be useful for AI researchers, data analysts, and students. It is equipped with the new GB10 Grace Blackwell superchip, offering computational power up to a petaflop. This enables the creation, fine-tuning, and running of AI models.
NVIDIA claims that a single Project Digits unit can run models with up to 200 billion parameters. The GB10 chip, developed in collaboration with MediaTek, is equipped with an NVIDIA Blackwell GPU and a 20-core NVIDIA Grace processor. Inside the unit, the chips are connected to 128 GB of memory and up to 4 TB of flash storage.
Two Project Digits computers can be combined to run models with 405 billion parameters if the task requires it. Project Digits can operate autonomously with a DGX operating system based on Linux or connect to a main computer running Windows or Mac.
"With Project Digits, the Grace Blackwell superchip will be available to millions of developers," says NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang. "Placing an AI supercomputer on the desk of every data analyst, AI researcher, and student will enable them to participate in shaping the era of artificial intelligence."
The first Project Digits units will go on sale in May this year and will cost $3000.