NVIDIA hand-delivers the first Vera CPU systems to Anthropic, OpenAI, SpaceXAI, and more

Ian Buck, NVIDIA's Vice President of Hyperscale and High-Performance Computing hand delivers the very first standalone Vera CPUs built for Agentic AI.

NVIDIA hand-delivers the first Vera CPU systems to Anthropic, OpenAI, SpaceXAI, and more
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TL;DR: NVIDIA has introduced the Vera CPU, featuring 88 custom Olympus cores, 1.2 TB/s memory bandwidth, and 50% faster per-core performance, designed specifically for Agentic AI tasks like long-context retrieval. Ian Buck personally delivered the first units to major AI companies, marking Vera's entry into full production alongside the Vera Rubin platform.
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NVIDIA has begun hand-delivering its first custom CPU designed for Agentic AI. The Vera CPU featured 88 custom Olympus cores, an impressive 1.2 TB/s of memory bandwidth, and 50% faster per-core performance under full load. And with that, NVIDIA Vice President of Hyperscale and High-Performance Computing, Ian Buck, personally hand-delivered the first Vera CPUs to the biggest AI companies in California: Anthropic, OpenAI, SpaceXAI, and Oracle Cloud Infrastructure.

Elon Musk was on hand to accept the new NVIDIA Vera CPU delivery from Ian Buck, image credit: NVIDIA.
Elon Musk was on hand to accept the new NVIDIA Vera CPU delivery from Ian Buck, image credit: NVIDIA.

Although NVIDIA is synonymous with generative AI thanks to its GPUs, Agentic AI still requires a powerful CPU to handle tasks such as long-context retrieval. "Vera is a new class of CPU designed with that reality as its starting point," NVIDIA explains. "This gauntlet of concurrent, real-time tasks puts pressure on CPUs in ways traditional core-density focused designs were never built to prioritize."

As the successor to Grace, Vera underscores the growing importance of CPUs in AI, and the Vera CPU is the first data center CPU to use LPDDR5X memory, delivering 1.2 TB/s of memory bandwidth. And with that, even though it will ship as part of the Vera Rubin platform that combines CPU and GPU technology, it's also set to be made available as a standalone CPU solution. NVIDIA's hand-delivery of the first Vera CPUs signals that Vera and Rubin are entering their respective full production phases for a global rollout in the coming months.

Ian Buck, NVIDIA Vice President of Hyperscale and High-Performance Computing, and James Bradbury, Anthropic's head of compute, image credit: NVIDIA.
Ian Buck, NVIDIA Vice President of Hyperscale and High-Performance Computing, and James Bradbury, Anthropic's head of compute, image credit: NVIDIA.

"Agentic AI is creating a new CPU moment in the AI factory - as models move from answering to acting, Vera is purpose-built to keep that work moving at scale," NVIDIA's Ian Buck said. "When AI models are posed a question, the answer, often, isn't already prepped and ready to go. The models actually have to generate some Python code to arrive at the correct answer. A task at which the Vera CPU excels. That's why we are seeing the demand for CPUs skyrocket."

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News Source:blogs.nvidia.com

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Kosta is a veteran gaming journalist that cut his teeth on well-respected Aussie publications like PC PowerPlay and HYPER back when articles were printed on paper. A lifelong gamer since the 8-bit Nintendo era, it was the CD-ROM-powered 90s that cemented his love for all things games and technology. From point-and-click adventure games to RTS games with full-motion video cut-scenes and FPS titles referred to as Doom clones. Genres he still loves to this day. Kosta is also a musician, releasing dreamy electronic jams under the name Kbit.

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