At last week's RTX Blackwell Editor's Day in glorious Las Vegas*, deep in the midst of CES 2025, Brian Catanzaro, Nvidia's VP of applied deep learning research, took to the stage to talk through DLSS 4 and the many changes and challenges it brings with it.
One of the biggest announcements in Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s CES keynote was the small “Project Digits” AI supercomputer, and if you want to get an idea of just how tiny the $3,000 machine is in real life, we snapped a couple photos of the device under glass today at the show.
While discussing the tech at at the consumer electronics show, Nvidia's VP of applied deep learning research, Bryan Catanzaro, said improving DLSS has been a continuous,
Nvidia Digits represents a significant leap forward in AI technology. By combining powerful hardware, a comprehensive software stack and a compact, power-efficient design, Digits brings the capabilities of an AI supercomputer to the desktop.
Nvidia, the undisputed leader in the rapidly growing AI hardware market, has announced a “personal AI supercomputer” intended to be used by researchers and data scientists looking to run large AI models on their own personal computers.
Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Nvidia unveiled Project Digits, a device it's calling a 'personal AI supercomputer.'
When I first saw that photo of Nvidia’s new Project Digits mini PC unveiled at CES 2025, I couldn’t help but notice the Apple influence — minimalist, sleek, next to a monitor that looks like ...
NVIDIA is planning to invest approximately $500 million in a Blackwell-powered supercomputer facility that's located in Yokne'am, Israel.
NVIDIA’s new Project Digits mini supercomputer is designed for developers, researchers, students, and data scientists who need to run AI models and will be small enough to fit in a bag.
Paired with Arm's advanced Cortex-X925 and Cortex-A725 CPU cores, DIGITS promises a new level of computing power. Despite its size, it can process massive AI models with up to 200 billion parameters and is capable of running the most resource-intensive AI tasks with ease.
Nvidia is launching an AI supercomputer in a desktop format, company chief executive Jensen Huang has announced, unveiling a compact device named Project Digits at the CES tech fair in Las Vegas. Nvidia believes that millions of developers,
Project DIGITS main purpose seems to be as a desktop showcase for the GB10 AI superchip. Each machine will includje 128GB of unified, coherent memory and 4TB of storage. Users can even link two together to run 405 billion parameter models, previously only the reserve of the big AI labs.