NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang personally delivered the first DGX Spark unit—the most compact AI supercomputer—to Elon Musk. The symbolic handover coincided with the announcement of the system's release date: October 15, 2025.
DGX Spark was created as an embodiment of Huang's philosophy—"to make artificial intelligence accessible to everyone." The desktop-format device provides supercomputer-level performance, allowing models to be trained without connecting to the cloud.
During his visit to SpaceX, Huang recalled that he was the one who handed Musk the first NVIDIA DGX-1 for OpenAI. Now history repeats itself—DGX Spark should become the "spark" for a new wave of AI development in homes and small businesses.
DGX Spark technical specifications:
• NVIDIA GB10 Grace Blackwell Superchip, up to 1 petaflop (FP4)
• 128 GB of unified CPU-GPU memory
• NVIDIA ConnectX and NVLink-C2C with 5x higher bandwidth than PCIe
• Fast NVMe drives, HDMI, support for all NVIDIA dev environments
Sales will begin under the Acer, ASUS, Dell, GIGABYTE, HP, Lenovo, and MSI brands at a price of around $3999. The premiere was originally scheduled for July, but the postponement was caused by problems with the GB10 chip (NVIDIA + MediaTek).
DGX Spark continues the line of DGX systems used in laboratories and data centers, but now NVIDIA is bringing the power of a supercomputer to the level of a desktop device—compact enough to hold in your hands, and yet capable of training language and generative models.