Acer unveils Project Digits supercomputer featuring Nvidia's GB10 superchip with 128GB of LPDDR5x

4 hours ago 4
Acer GN100 AI Mini Workstation
(Image credit: Acer)

Acer has unveiled its own version of Nvidia's Project Digits mini-supercomputer, the Acer Veriton GN100 AI Mini Workstation, which is geared toward developers, universities, data scientists, and researchers who need a compact and high-speed AI system. North American pricing starts at $3,999.

The Veriton GN100 is a compact mini-PC (measuring 150 x 150 x 50.5mm), that comes housed in a black chassis with a silver grill on the front. The system features Nvidia's GB10 Grace Blackwell Superchip, which has 20 ARM CPU cores (10 Cortex-X925 and 10 A725 cores), and a Blackwell-based GPU sporting one petaFLOP of FP4 floating point performance. The GB10 Superchip is fed by 128 GB of LPDDR5x memory and can house up to four 4TB of M.2 NVMe storage with self-encryption capabilities.

Acer GN100 AI Mini Workstation
(Image credit: Acer)

Some might argue that building an RTX 5090-powered gaming/workstation system might be better — and, on the surface, that's probably true. But Nvidia's GB10 supports 128GB of system memory and has native support for Nvidia's proprietary NVFP4 — two important factors for dedicated AI work, which the RTX 5090 cannot provide. The extra memory allows users to run AI models that would be impossible on a single RTX 5090, and NVFP4 is a new FP4 standard that can significantly improve processing efficiency in AI workloads (with accuracy that approaches BF16).

This makes Nvidia's Project Digits architecture much more attractive for dedicated, professional AI developers. As of this writing, Acer has yet to announce an exact release date for the Veriton GN100, though it has said that availability will vary by region.

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Aaron Klotz is a contributing writer for Tom’s Hardware, covering news related to computer hardware such as CPUs, and graphics cards.

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