NVIDIA's Blackwell AI GPU lineup will include two major accelerators, the B100 for 2024 and the B200 for 2025, as revealed by Dell.
During its recent earnings call, Dell revealed the fact that NVIDIA's next-generation Blackwell lineup won't just have a B100 AI accelerator but there will be an upgraded version offered later on. By the looks of things, NVIDIA seems to have already disclosed this information to its largest partners such as Dell who will be operating servers and data centers using NVIDIA's latest AI and compute-ready hardware.
We know that NVIDIA's Blackwell GPUs are headed for launch this year and will make their formal debut at GTC 2024 this month which is just a few weeks away. The current roadmaps point out the NVIDIA B100, GB200 and GB200NVL with B100 being the codename for the GPU itself, GB200 being the Superchip platform and GB200NVL being the interconnected platform for supercomputing use.
Currently, there are reports that NVIDIA's Blackwell GPUs might utilize a monolithic design though nothing is concrete yet. What is known is that like the Hopper H200 GPUs, the Blackwell B100 in its first generation will leverage HBM3e memory technologies. So the upgraded B200 variant can end up using an even faster version of the HBM memory along with possibly higher memory capacities, upgraded specs, and enhanced features. Samsung is said to be a major memory provider for the Blackwell GPUs.
Interestingly, Dell's SVP also points out that the power density of these next-gen GPUs such as the NVIDIA Blackwell B100 & B200 is going to be 1000W which is a huge number but nothing that we did not expect from some of the world's fastest AI accelerators. The NVIDIA Hopper H200 and AMD Instinct MI300X can already consume up to 800W at peak power so given
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