Nvidia Releases DGX Station Supercomputer for Windows, Capable of Running AI Without a Data Centre
Nvidia has introduced its latest artificial intelligence (AI) computer designed for the Windows operating system (OS), known as the DGX Station for Windows. The computer was announced during the GTC (GPU Technology Conference) Taipei 2026 on Sunday (31/05/2026).
The DGX Station is a supercomputer designed with a more compact form factor than typical supercomputers, allowing it to be placed directly on a desk. Despite its size, the DGX Station for Windows is capable of running very large AI models locally. The device is claimed to be the most powerful AI supercomputer for the Windows ecosystem.
Nvidia stated that the DGX Station for Windows is the most powerful AI computer available, meaning users can perform advanced AI workloads—such as training, fine-tuning, large-scale inference, and the development of AI agents—rapidly and directly on the device. Chris Marriott, Vice President of Enterprise Platforms at Nvidia, noted that the DGX Station for Windows is intended to meet the needs of companies within the Windows ecosystem that require sophisticated AI-based supercomputing.
“As companies begin to adopt AI agents at scale, they require AI infrastructure that can connect directly to their applications and business workflows, and the DGX Station for Windows can meet that need,” said Marriott.
The DGX Station for Windows is powered by the Nvidia GB300 Grace Blackwell Ultra Desktop Superchip, which combines the Blackwell Ultra GPU and the 72-core Grace CPU via NVLink-C2C technology. The device features integrated memory of up to 748 GB, with AI performance reaching 20 petaflops FP4. Users can also add Nvidia RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell Workstation GPUs for more intensive AI computing, visualisation, and simulation needs.
In terms of networking, the device includes a ConnectX-8 SuperNIC with support for connections up to 800 Gbps for high-speed data transfer. This component can also link multiple DGX Station units into a single system. Generally, Nvidia stated that the DGX Station is designed to run autonomous, always-on AI agents. These agents can connect to various business applications, including design and engineering software, to help automate tasks and increase productivity.
Regarding security, Nvidia also introduced OpenShell, an open-source platform that provides an isolated environment (sandbox) for each AI agent, ensuring that security and privacy policies for every agent remain at the system level. The DGX Station for Windows will be marketed through several Nvidia partner vendors, including Asus, Dell Technologies, Gigabyte, HP, MSI, and Supermicro. The device is scheduled to launch in the fourth quarter (Q4) of 2026 and can be used by individuals or teams as an AI computing hub that can be expanded to data centres or the cloud.