Intel just greenlit a monstrous dual-GPU video card with 48GB of RAM just for AI – and here it is
- Intel’s Arc Pro B60 Dual offers pro-grade memory at a fraction of Nvidia’s price
- This dual-GPU rig from Maxsun delivers workstation power
- Each GPU gets one DisplayPort and one HDMI, avoiding OS overload in multi-GPU workstations
At Computex 2025, Maxsun unveiled a striking new entry in the AI hardware space: the Intel Arc Pro B60 Dual GPU, a graphics card pairing two 24GB B60 chips for a combined 48GB of memory.
Servethehomeclaims Maxsun envisions these cards powering dense workstation builds with up to four per system, yielding as much as 192GB of GPU memory in a desktop-class machine.
This development appears to have Intel’s implicit approval, suggesting the company is looking to gain traction in the AI GPU market.
A dual-GPU card built for AI memory demands
The Arc Pro B60 Dual GPU is not designed for gaming. Instead, it focuses on AI, graphics, and virtualization tasks, offering a power-efficient profile.
Each card draws between 240W and 300W, keeping power and thermal demands within reach for standard workstation setups.
Unlike some alternatives, this card uses a blower-style cooler rather than a passive solution, helping it remain compatible with conventional workstation designs. That matters for users who want high-end performance without building custom cases or cooling systems.
Still, the architecture has trade-offs. The card relies on x8 PCIe lanes per GPU, bifurcated from a x16 connector. This simplifies design and installation but limits bandwidth compared to full x16 cards.
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Each GPU also includes just one DisplayPort and one HDMI output. That design choice keeps multi-GPU setups manageable and avoids hitting OS-level limits, older Windows versions, for example, may have trouble handling more than 32 active display outputs in a single system.
The card’s most intriguing feature may be its pricing. With single-GPU B60 cards reportedly starting around $375 MSRP, the dual-GPU version could land near $1,000.
If that estimate holds, Maxsun’s card would represent a major shift in value. For comparison, Nvidia’s RTX 6000 Ada, with the same 48GB of VRAM, sells for over $5,500. Two of those cards can push costs north of $18,000.
Even so, Intel’s performance in professional applications remains an open question. Many creative professionals still favor Nvidia for its mature drivers and better software optimization.
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Intel’s Arc Pro B60 Dual offers pro-grade memory at a fraction of Nvidia’s price This dual-GPU rig from Maxsun delivers workstation power Each GPU gets one DisplayPort and one HDMI, avoiding OS overload in multi-GPU workstations At Computex 2025, Maxsun unveiled a striking new entry in the AI hardware space:…
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