At Computex 2026, NVIDIA announced the new DGX Station for Windows, a desk-based supercomputer powered by the NVIDIA GB300 Grace Blackwell Ultra Desktop Superchip. Designed for powerful AI agents and heavy-duty enterprise AI workloads, it brings NVIDIA's Grace Blackwell-class AI infrastructure to the Windows ecosystem, enabling trillion-parameter AI.

At the heart of the system, which looks like a workstation, is the NVIDIA GB300 Grace Blackwell Ultra Desktop Superchip. This pairs a powerful 72-core NVIDIA Grace CPU with up to 748GB of memory and can connect to an NVIDIA Blackwell GPU, such as the NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Workstation Edition, via the NVLink-C2C interconnect for best-in-class communication and performance.
On the network side, you've also got impressive bandwidth, with up to 800 GB/s via the ConnectX-8 SuperNIC for fast network transfers and the ability to connect multiple DGX Station systems. NVIDIA notes that it has developed DGX Station in collaboration with Microsoft to run agents at scale for engineering, design, and more, within the secure, managed open-source NVIDIA OpenShell platform.
"For decades, Microsoft and NVIDIA have partnered to advance the most powerful computing platforms in the world," said Pavan Davuluri, executive vice president of Windows + Devices at Microsoft. "Today, we're taking that collaboration to the next level, scaling the full power of Windows from thin-and-light PCs to data-center-class workstations with DGX Station powered by GB300. This unlocks a new class of AI performance on Windows, the platform enterprises trust for security, manageability, and compatibility."
"As enterprises scale AI agents across their organizations, they need AI infrastructure that can connect directly to the applications and workflows that power their business," said Chris Marriott, vice president of enterprise platforms at NVIDIA. "DGX Station delivers supercomputing-class AI directly into Windows, where millions already design, engineer, research, and create every day."
DGX Station for Windows systems is on track for release in Q4 2026, with systems coming from ASUS, Dell Technologies, GIGABYTE, HP, MSI, and Supermicro.










