Talk about VIP service – Elon Musk and Sam Altman have their DGX Spark mini PCs hand-delivered by Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang
- Jensen Huang delivery stunt turns product launch into an industry statement
- Nvidia DGX Spark carries more symbolism than silicon in today’s AI world
- Musk and Altman’s rivalry now fuels Nvidia’s growing dominance in AI
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has appeared at Elon Musk’s Starbase in Texas to personally deliver a DGX Spark, joking about “delivering the smallest supercomputer next to the biggest rocket.”
However the gesture symbolized more than just a marketing stunt, it highlighted how the AI industry’s biggest figures now operate in rival camps, separated by both ideology and ambition.
Sam Altman received the same hand-delivered system elsewhere, a repeat of the courtesy shown nine years earlier when Huang brought OpenAI its first DGX-1.
From diner shifts to billion-dollar deals
Huang’s history is one of calculated symbolism. Once a Denny’s server, he has embraced that role again, this time offering computing power instead of pancakes.
His latest “delivery service” might seem whimsical, but it reinforces Nvidia’s dominance at a time when demand for high-performance AI hardware has never been higher.
Each DGX Spark, sold for $3,999, represents not only a tool but a token of status among AI leaders.
Nvidia’s decision to limit the first batch to companies like Google, Meta, and Microsoft underlines its gatekeeper role in a crowded market hungry for compute.
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The DGX Spark is a mini PC powered by the GB10 Grace Blackwell Superchip. It boasts 128GB of unified memory and up to a petaflop of AI performance.
Nvidia claims it can run models with up to 200 billion parameters, but such numbers raise questions about how sustainable and accessible this kind of performance really is outside elite research labs.
Partner brands like Acer, Asus, Dell, and Lenovo are offering their own versions, although buyers hoping for Huang’s personal touch will have to settle for standard shipping.
While the shared photo of Huang between Altman and Greg Brockman might suggest camaraderie, the underlying story tells otherwise.
Musk and Altman’s relationship, once built on the shared vision of “safe AI for the benefit of humankind,” has turned into open competition.
Musk’s xAI and Altman’s OpenAI now lead two different paths toward AI supremacy, both relying on Nvidia’s silicon to stay ahead.
For tech elites, the DGX Spark marks influence as much as innovation. For researchers, it reflects how progress in AI often depends on who can afford the latest hardware.
Nvidia’s carefully staged deliveries show that in AI, perception often carries as much weight as raw power.
Via Tom’s Hardware
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Jensen Huang delivery stunt turns product launch into an industry statement Nvidia DGX Spark carries more symbolism than silicon in today’s AI world Musk and Altman’s rivalry now fuels Nvidia’s growing dominance in AI Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has appeared at Elon Musk’s Starbase in Texas to personally deliver a…
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