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Workstation, a high-performance computer system that is primarily created for a single user and features powerful central processing, big storage, and excellent graphics capabilities.
Compared to a standard PC, a workstation is more durable and has better specifications, including a faster CPU and GPU, more memory, more storage, software certification, and the capacity to sustain continuous use. They frequently have a discrete GPU so the CPU doesn’t have to perform visual chores twice.
The global workstation processor market accounted for $XX Billion in 2023 and is anticipated to reach $XX Billion by 2030, registering a CAGR of XX% from 2024 to 2030.
A new Dell product introduces improved workstations. Recently, Dell Technologies provided a sneak preview of new items it is launching via webcast. The late March start featured a variety of items, from improved PCs to laptop docking stations to AI-based software, and themes surrounding the hybrid work experience and sustainability in manufacturing were covered by product leadership.
NVIDIA unveiled its first data center CPU, an Arm-based chip that will outperform best servers ten times over for the most demanding AI and high-performance computing workloads.
The NVIDIA Grace CPU, the product of more than thousand engineering years of work, is created to meet the computing needs of the most cutting-edge applications in the world, such as natural language processing, recommender systems, and AI supercomputing, which analyze enormous datasets and need both extremely fast compute performance and enormous memory.
It blends a cutting-edge low-power memory subsystem with energy-efficient Arm CPU cores to give exceptional performance with outstanding efficiency. The very specialized workloads that Grace is designed to handle include those for training next-generation NLP models with more than a trillion parameters.