To democratize AI, you start by giving the first box to a billionaire. Paradox or plan?
At Starbase in Texas on October 13, Jensen Huang unveiled NVIDIA’s DGX Spark with a handoff to Elon Musk that deliberately recalled the DGX-1 moment of 2016. The tiny system packs 1 petaflop into 1.18 kilograms, built on the GB10 Grace Blackwell chip co-developed with MediaTek and paired with 128 GB of unified LPDDR5X memory. Shipping with its own OS and software and sipping 170 watts, it aims to bring serious local AI compute within reach, backed by manufacturers such as ASUS, Dell, HP and Lenovo and early users from Anaconda and Google to Microsoft and NYU’s Global Frontier Lab. Orders open October 15, pointing to a wider rollout and a broader bid to make top-tier AI hardware easier to access.
Elon Musk and the DGX Spark: a symbolic moment
It’s not every day that two tech leaders converge to mark a historic milestone. On 13 October 2025 at SpaceX’s Starbase in Texas, Elon Musk received the first NVIDIA DGX Spark from Jensen Huang. The handover echoed Musk’s 2016 receipt of the DGX-1, a system that accelerated AI progress and helped shape tools like ChatGPT. Huang framed the moment as a push to democratize AI by placing powerful compute in more hands.
A closer look at the DGX Spark
The DGX Spark is a compact engineering feat. Weighing 1.18 kg, it delivers 1 PetaFLOP of performance. Its GB10 Grace Blackwell chip, developed by NVIDIA in collaboration with MediaTek, drives the system, paired with 128 GB LPDDR5X unified memory for complex AI workloads. Power consumption is 170 watts, helping control operational costs while maintaining capability. Built for cutting-edge tasks, it tackles the challenge of dependence on centralized clouds by enabling high-performance local development.
The wider impact: partnerships and availability
NVIDIA’s rollout is anchored by strong partners. Manufacturing is set with ASUS, Dell, HP, and Lenovo, ensuring broad availability. Early adopters include Microsoft, Google, and academic centers like NYU’s Global Frontier Lab, underscoring enthusiasm for this compact platform that removes barriers and lets researchers and developers move faster without traditional hardware or cost constraints.
Global order dates: Starting 15 October 2025.
Regional pricing: Tailored to fit diverse markets.
Software support: Comes pre-installed with NVIDIA’s highly optimized AI tools.
A step forward for AI accessibility
The DGX Spark represents access as much as power. For developers and companies, it offers a bridge to cutting-edge AI without reliance on sprawling data centers. For Musk, the moment reconnects with the earliest phases of modern AI progress and sets the stage for the next generation of breakthroughs. The relationship among Musk, Huang, and the wider tech ecosystem gains renewed momentum.