X

Nvidia Introduces DGX Spark Book-Size Supercomputer, Hand-Delivers One to Elon Musk

The computer is just 6 by 6 inches, costs about $4,000 and has a petaflop of performance.

Headshot of Omar Gallaga
Headshot of Omar Gallaga
Omar Gallaga
Tabletop with a pair of glasses, a laptop, and an Nvidia DGX Spark device lying horizontally.

Nvidia's mini AI supercomputer, the DGX Spark, measures less than six inches by six inches and is two inches thick. It delivers one petaflop of performance and has 128GB of unified memory, and sells for about $4,000.

Nvidia

Nvidia has introduced an update to its DGX AI supercomputer, the DGX Spark. The company is calling the new version the world's smallest AI supercomputer and will soon ship it for about $4,000.


Don't miss any of our unbiased tech content and lab-based reviews. Add CNET as a preferred Google source.


The computer is described as about the size of a piece of origami paper and the thickness of a hardback book (actual dimensions: 5.9 by 5.91 inches, and 1.99 inches thick). 

AI Atlas tag
Zooey Liao/CNET

The DGX Spark boasts one petaflop of performance power and includes 128GB of unified memory. By comparison, the first DGX computer introduced in 2016 offered 170 teraflops of performance, measured 34.1 by 17.48 inches, and was more than 5 inches thick. It cost $129,000.

To commemorate the impending launch of the DGX Spark, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang hand-delivered a signed computer to Elon Musk at his company, SpaceX, in Starbase, Texas. In 2016, Huang gave a team at OpenAI, including Musk, the first DGX-1 computer. 

Orders for the DGX Spark begin Oct. 15 on Nvidia's website.Â