NVIDIA has announced that NVIDIA GH200 Grace Hopper Superchip, its most powerful AI chip yet, is in full production. Set to power systems coming online worldwide to run complex AI and HPC workloads, the GH200-powered systems join more than 400 system configurations powered by different combinations of NVIDIA’s latest CPU, GPU and DPU architectures — including NVIDIA Grace, NVIDIA Hopper, NVIDIA Ada Lovelace and NVIDIA BlueField — created to help meet the surging demand for generative AI.
At COMPUTEX, NVIDIA founder and CEO Jensen Huang revealed new systems, partners and additional details surrounding the GH200 Grace Hopper Superchip, which brings together the Arm-based NVIDIA Grace CPU and Hopper GPU architectures using NVIDIA NVLink-C2C interconnect technology. This delivers up to 900GB/s total bandwidth — 7x higher bandwidth than the standard PCIe Gen5 lanes found in traditional accelerated systems, providing incredible compute capability to address the most demanding generative AI and HPC applications.
Global hyperscalers and supercomputing centers in Europe and the U.S. are among several customers that will have access to GH200-powered systems.
NVIDIA L4 GPUs are generally available on Google Cloud.
Systems with GH200 Grace Hopper Superchips should be available beginning later this year.