- Dell’s Pro Max GB10 remains unavailable while Asus ships its own powerful GB10 system
- Asus Ascent GX10 delivers petascale performance in a compact desktop package
- AI developers can buy Asus’ Grace Blackwell PC now for $4,100
Dell’s upcoming Pro Max GB10 AI workstation looks like a sleek piece of kit, but unfortunately it’s not currently available for purchase.
The system, built around Nvidia’s new Grace Blackwell GB10 superchip, is listed with “notify me when available” status on Dell’s website, with no indication of when that might be.
If you can’t wait for it to go on sale and don’t mind looking elsewhere, Asus already has its own AI-focused desktop, the Ascent GX10.
First out of the door
Asus’ mini-beast uses the same GB10 hardware and can be ordered now from Viperatech for $4,100. The retailer says it will ship within ten days.
Both systems, along with others from the likes of Acer, are designed for researchers and developers who want data center-level power in a workstation-sized package.
The GB10 chip merges CPU and GPU resources into a single unit and delivers up to a petaflop of FP4 computing performance.
It comes with 128GB of LPDDR5x unified memory and supports models with up to 200 billion parameters, a scale once limited to large server clusters.
It features an ARM v9.2-A processor paired with Nvidia’s integrated Blackwell GPU, running on the Grace Blackwell architecture.
Storage options range from 1TB PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSDs to 4TB PCIe 5.0 drives, providing ample space for datasets and project files.
Connectivity comes in the form of Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5, and 10G Ethernet.
Ports include multiple USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 Type-C ports, one of which supports 180W power delivery, as well as HDMI 2.1 for external displays.
Measuring just 150mm square and 51mm high and weighing 1.48kg, the GX10 is small but powerful and features advanced thermal management to keep things cool and running smoothly, even under heavy loads.
It also supports dual-system stacking via Nvidia’s ConnectX-7 network and NVLink-C2C interface, enabling local compute expansion.
For developers eager to experiment with large AI models, Asus offers one of the few ready-to-use systems based on Nvidia’s latest architecture.
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