Nvidia Announces DGX Station Desktop PC With GB300 Chip and 748GB Memory

The DGX Station brings Nvidia's trillion-parameter AI compute capability from the data center to a Windows desktop form factor, targeting enterprise on-premises AI development.

Reporting from 1 sources: GIGAZINE.

Nvidia Announces DGX Station Desktop PC With GB300 Chip and 748GB Memory

Nvidia announced the DGX Station, a Windows desktop PC built around the GB300 Grace Blackwell Ultra Desktop Superchip, during its GTC Taipei 2026 keynote. The system delivers 20 petaflops of FP4 performance, supports up to 748GB of memory, and can run AI models with up to 1 trillion parameters locally. It is scheduled to launch in the fourth quarter of 2026 through partners including ASUS, Dell, GIGABYTE, HP, MSI, and Supermicro.

The DGX Station is not a workstation in the traditional sense. It is a desktop PC built around the GB300 Grace Blackwell Ultra Desktop Superchip, which combines a Blackwell Ultra GPU with a 72-core Grace CPU. Nvidia said the system delivers 20 petaflops of FP4 performance and supports up to 748GB of memory, enough to run AI models with up to 1 trillion parameters locally. The machine runs Windows. Nvidia announced the product during the keynote of its GTC Taipei 2026 conference. The DGX Station will be sold by ASUS, Dell Technologies, GIGABYTE, HP, MSI, and Supermicro, with a launch planned for the fourth quarter of 2026.

Synthesized by Yomimono from the 1 cited source below, including Japanese-language reporting where cited, then editorially reviewed before publishing.

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