×
Nvidia launches $3K desktop AI supercomputer with petaflop performance
Written by
Published on
Join our daily newsletter for breaking news, product launches and deals, research breakdowns, and other industry-leading AI coverage
Join Now

Nvidia has launched its DGX Spark “personal AI supercomputer” for sale this week, priced at $3,000 and designed to fit on a desktop while delivering data center-level AI performance. The compact machine democratizes access to sophisticated AI computing power that was previously only available through expensive, energy-intensive data centers, potentially transforming how researchers, students, and data scientists engage with AI development.

What you should know: The Spark delivers enterprise-grade AI capabilities in a desktop form factor that can run on standard power outlets.

  • The system features Nvidia’s GB10 Grace Blackwell Superchip, 128GB of unified memory, and up to 4TB of NVMe SSD storage.
  • It can deliver a petaflop of AI performance — capable of one million billion calculations per second — and handle AI models with up to 200 billion parameters.
  • Nvidia calls it “the world’s smallest AI supercomputer,” emphasizing its compact desktop footprint.

How to get it: Spark is available for purchase starting Wednesday through multiple channels.

  • Orders can be placed directly at nvidia.com as well as through select partners and retail stores in the US.
  • Third-party manufacturers including Asus, Dell, and HP are developing their own versions of the system.
  • A larger variant called Station exists, though Nvidia hasn’t announced general availability plans for that model.

Why this matters: The launch represents a significant shift in making high-performance AI computing accessible to individual researchers and smaller organizations.

  • Previously, this level of AI performance required access to expensive data centers with high energy demands.
  • The democratization of AI supercomputing could accelerate research and development across academic institutions and smaller companies.
  • As Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang explained when first announcing the system: “placing an AI supercomputer on the desks of every data scientist, AI researcher and student empowers them to engage and shape the age of AI.”

The bigger picture: Spark positions Nvidia to capture the growing market for personal AI computing as demand for local AI processing increases amid privacy concerns and latency requirements for real-time applications.

You can now buy Nvidia’s personal desktop ‘AI supercomputers’

Recent News

Google Meet adds 12 AI makeup filters for shyness-free video calls

The feature targets appearance anxiety that keeps some workers off camera.

TDK develops analog AI chip that mimics brain function for edge computing

The chip mimics your cerebellum to process sensor data with ultra-low power consumption.

Elon Musk’s own Grok confirms Lucid Air beats Tesla Model S

The marketing stunt highlights Tesla's 12-year Model S stagnation problem.