Renowned chipmaking giant NVIDIA has unveiled “Project Digits,” a revolutionary AI personal supercomputer designed to deliver unprecedented processing power to researchers, data scientists, and developers. Announced at the CES 2025 tech expo, the device boasts a performance of one petaFLOP—equivalent to 1,000 times the power of today’s high-end laptops.
“Project Digits,” a revolutionary AI personal supercomputer designed to deliver unprecedented processing power to researchers, data scientists, and developers.
NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang, during the CES 2025 technology expo revealed the innovation.
“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,” Huang stated.
Targeted at developers, researchers, and students, the compact supercomputer is small enough for desktop use and potentially portable. Final design details are pending, but its versatility promises to make high-level AI computations accessible to a broader audience.

Powered by NVIDIA’s Groundbreaking Grace Blackwell SuperchipAt the core of Project Digits is NVIDIA’s state-of-the-art GB10 Grace Blackwell Superchip, a fusion of a Blackwell graphics card and the NVIDIA Grace processor. By combining these components onto a single chip, NVIDIA minimizes data transfer delays, maximizing computational efficiency.
The device is equipped with 128 GB of memory and 4 TB of SSD storage, offering speed and capacity for processing complex AI models.
It operates on a standard power outlet, ensuring accessibility for everyday users and is every inch a supercomputer in a compact Form
With a capability of one quadrillion floating-point operations per second (FLOPS), Project Digits delivers supercomputer-grade performance in a size compact enough to fit on a desk—or even in a bag. NVIDIA envisions the device as a key tool for running advanced AI models, capable of handling up to 200 billion parameters individually.
For even larger tasks, two units can be linked via NVIDIA ConnectX Networking, enabling the processing of models with up to 405 billion parameters. This makes Project Digits a versatile solution for both standalone and collaborative AI research.
Set to launch in May 2025, interested users can register for updates on NVIDIA’s website.
