The company unveiled the platform and more at CES 2026.
A boom in AI demand and the accompanying shortage in memory supply is all anyone in the industry is talking about. At CES 2026 in Las Vegas, Nevada, it was also at the heart of Nvidia’s latest major product releases.
On Monday, the company officially launched the Rubin platform, made up of six chips that combine into one AI supercomputer, which company officials claim is more efficient than the Blackwell models and boasts increases in compute and memory bandwidth.
“Rubin arrives at exactly the right moment, as AI computing demand for both training and inference is going through the roof,” Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said in a press release.
Rubin-based products will be available from Nvidia partners in the second half of 2026, company executives said, naming AWS, Anthropic, Google, Meta, Microsoft, OpenAI, Oracle, and xAI among the companies expected to adopt Rubin.
“The efficiency gains in the NVIDIA Rubin platform represent the kind of infrastructure progress that enables longer memory, better reasoning, and more reliable outputs,” Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said in the press release.
GPUs have become an expensive and scarce commodity as the rapidly scaling data center projects drain the global memory chip supply.
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