NVIDIA CEO Huang Renxun: All Seven Vera Rubin Chips in Full Production, Foresees $1 Trillion Computing Power Orders

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According to CoinWorld, monitored by 1M AI News, NVIDIA Founder and CEO Jensen Huang officially announced at GTC 2026 that the Vera Rubin platform is now in full production, integrating seven new chips and covering five types of rack systems. The entire design is a supercomputer built specifically for intelligent AI agents. The core rack, Vera Rubin NVL72, integrates 72 Rubin GPUs and 36 Vera CPUs, interconnected via NVLink 6. Compared to the previous Blackwell platform, the number of GPUs needed to train large hybrid expert models has been reduced to a quarter, with inference throughput per watt reaching up to 10 times that of Blackwell, and token costs reduced to one-tenth. The five rack system types form the complete AI factory infrastructure:

  • Vera Rubin NVL72 GPU rack
  • Vera CPU rack (256 Vera CPUs, twice as efficient as traditional CPUs, 50% faster)
  • Groq 3 LPX inference acceleration rack
  • BlueField-4 STX storage rack (designed for AI agent key-value caching, inference throughput increased by up to 5 times)
  • Spectrum-6 SPX Ethernet rack

In terms of power management, NVIDIA simultaneously released the DSX platform: DSX Max-Q can deploy 30% more AI infrastructure within fixed power limits, and DSX Flex can activate 100 gigawatts of previously unused grid capacity. Cloud providers such as AWS, Google Cloud, Microsoft Azure, Oracle Cloud, as well as system vendors like CoreWeave, Lambda, Nebius, and others, including Cisco, Dell Technologies, HPE, Lenovo, and Supermicro, have announced plans to launch Vera Rubin products in the second half of this year. Anthropic, Meta, Mistral AI, and OpenAI have explicitly stated they will use this platform to train larger-scale models. Huang predicts that combined orders for Blackwell and Vera Rubin systems will reach at least $1 trillion from 2025 to 2027, doubling the $500 billion forecast given at last year’s GTC.

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