
In the delivery manifests, a NVIDIA RTX video card with 96 GB GDDR7 on a 512-bit bus was found. It is most likely a professional graphic adapter. The previous generation offered up to 48 GB.
The website ComputerBase found in the NBD databases mentions of RTX Blackwell video cards with 96 GB GDDR7. Considering the stated 512-bit bus, it involves the use of new 3 GB GDDR7 memory modules in a “foldout” configuration — two per controller. The only consumer model with 3 GB chips is the RTX 5090 for laptops, which only has 24 GB on a 256-bit bus.
The top NVIDIA RTX 5090 gaming video card uses 2 GB GDDR7 memory modules and has “only” 32 GB. The top professional video cards RTX 6000 ADA and RTX 5880 ADA had 48 GB of built-in memory.

The card for workstations will likely be called RTX 6000 Blackwell, RTX 8000 Blackwell, or something similar. It uses the PG153 board, which has not been seen in any video card yet.
The new product will almost certainly receive the GB202 graphics processor, which is the only Blackwell desktop chip with a 512-bit bus. Historically, workstation RTX models have more CUDA cores than gaming video cards, so this sample with 96 GB will almost certainly have over 21760 cores.
Source: VideoCardz
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