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Home Server Accelerators NVIDIA Computex 2026 News Bytes: Vera Rubin Now In Production, DGX Station...

NVIDIA Computex 2026 News Bytes: Vera Rubin Now In Production, DGX Station Gets Windows

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Nvidia Vera Rubin Platform
Nvidia Vera Rubin Platform

Alongside NVIDIA’s marquee hardware announcements at this year’s Computex trade show, the company had a couple of smaller announcements that warrant a quick mention.

Vera Rubin Now In Full Production, Systems Due In Fall

First and foremost, NVIDIA’s Vera Rubin server platform is now in full production, with NVIDIA continuing to ramp chips.

NVIDIA Computex 2026 Keynote Vera Rubin Full Production
NVIDIA Computex 2026 Keynote Vera Rubin Full Production

The backbone of the company’s next generation of server infrastructure, Vera Rubin entails both the new Vera CPU, an 88-core design based on NVIDIA’s Olympus CPU core, as well as a new GPU built on the Rubin architecture. Both chips will be built on TSMC’s 3nm process, which is a generation newer than the N4 process used for the current Grace Blackwell duo.

AIVRES Booth Tour NVIDIA HGX Vera Platform B KR 2546 P 1
AIVRES Booth Tour NVIDIA HGX Vera Platform B KR 2546 P 1

According to NVIDIA, shipments of Vera Rubin shipments are slated to begin this fall.

NVIDIA Expands DGX Family with DGX Station for Windows

Computex 2026 marks NVIDIA’s second big push into supplying complete SoCs for Windows devices. As well as the company’s RTX Spark chips for consumer devices, NVIDIA is also bringing GB300 to the Windows ecosystem via a version of the DGX Station system that can run Windows. It is aptly named the DGX Station for Windows.

Nvidia Dgx Station For Windows
Nvidia Dgx Station For Windows

With the original Linux version of the DGX Station finally launching a few months back, NVIDIA has now turned its attention to making the hardware available under Windows. All of the information released by NVIDIA thus far indicates that the systems are functionally identical to their Linux counterparts, and that the supported operating system (and presumably, the BIOS/firmware needed to enable it) are the only major changes from the original systems. So that means the same GB300 chip with 72 Neoverse V2 CPU cores, a Blackwell Ultra GPU, and 252GB of HBM3e memory. And with the same 1600 Watt power requirement.

NVIDIA DGX Station Key Specs
CPU NVIDIA Grace (72C/72T)
GPU NVIDIA B300 Blackwell Ultra
Operating System NVIDIA DGX OS
Memory CPU: 496GB LPDDR5X SOCAMM
GPU: 252GB HBM3e
Storage Optional
Video Card Optional: NVIDIA RTX PRO Blackwell 2000/4000/6000
PSU 1600W
Form Factor Tower Workstation
Networking ConnectX-8 800Gbps Ethernet
10Gb Ethernet (AQC-113C)
1Gb Ethernet (BMC)
Ports Front:
2x USB-C 10Gbps, 2x USB-A 10Gbps, 1x Combo Audio
Rear:
4x USB-A 10Gbps, 1x USB Micro-B (BMC), 2x 400GbE (QSFP112), 1x 10GbE LAN (RJ45, AQC-113C), 1x 1GbE LAN (RJ45, BMC), 3x Audio, 1x Mini DisplayPort (BMC)

The Windows version of the DGX Station will be aimed at the same professional developer market as the original machine, with NVIDIA and its OEM partners looking to bridge the gap with developers who need (or want) to run on Windows rather than Linux.

DGX Station for Windows systems are expected to launch in Q4 of this year, shortly after RTX Spark systems. Currently ASUS, Dell, Gigabyte, HP, MSI, and Supermicro are all slated to offer the high-powered Windows systems.

NVIDIA Computex 2026 Keynote NVIDIA Windows Machines
NVIDIA Computex 2026 Keynote NVIDIA Windows Machines

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