Enterprises Adopt NVIDIA RTX PRO Servers to Power AI Transformation Across Industries
NVIDIA has announced that leading global enterprises are adopting its new NVIDIA RTX PRO Servers, a next-generation data center infrastructure powered by the RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition GPU. These servers are helping companies transition from traditional computing clusters to AI-optimized data centers without requiring a full infrastructure overhaul. Early adopters include Disney, Foxconn, Hitachi Ltd., Hyundai Motor Group, Eli Lilly, SAP, and TSMC. They are using the servers to accelerate AI-driven applications in design, simulation, manufacturing, healthcare, and more. Jensen Huang, NVIDIA’s founder and CEO, stated, “The age of AI has arrived — and enterprises can no longer rely on classical servers alone. They must rearchitect for AI.” He described RTX PRO as the ideal platform for today’s hybrid workloads, supporting both current IT operations and next-generation AI agents. The RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition leverages the Blackwell architecture to deliver universal acceleration across agentic AI, physical AI, scientific computing, graphics, video processing, and simulation. Enterprises are deploying the servers to solve complex challenges across industries. Disney is using the technology to enhance immersive guest experiences, such as the updated Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run attraction at Disneyland and Walt Disney World, which will launch alongside the film “The Mandalorian and Grogu.” Foxconn is integrating RTX PRO Servers into its global manufacturing infrastructure to advance AI-driven automation in robotics, logistics, and electric vehicle production. Hitachi Ltd. plans to use the servers to build digital twins of physical assets, improving infrastructure optimization and business productivity through AI reasoning and physical AI. Hyundai Motor Group is leveraging the platform for digital twin simulations in manufacturing and autonomous driving, aiming to reduce factory setup time and accelerate vehicle testing. Lilly is using the technology to expand its drug discovery capabilities, exploring vast molecular spaces with GPU-powered AI to identify novel treatments faster. SAP highlighted the secure integration of RTX PRO Servers into its SAP Cloud Infrastructure, enabling enterprises to run SAP Business AI with full control over data and operations. TSMC emphasized the role of semiconductors in powering AI, using RTX PRO Servers to enhance its fab operations and advance AI-driven manufacturing through the Blackwell architecture. Beyond these leaders, companies like PEGATRON, Quanta Cloud Technology, Siemens, and Wistron are using the servers for factory automation and simulation. PubMatic is applying them to AI use cases in connected TV, commerce media, and mobile apps. Northrop Grumman is accelerating AI integration across its operations. Amdocs is deploying the servers to power its amAIz Agents for telecom customer experiences. Cadence, Siemens EDA, and Synopsys are using them to speed up AI-driven chip and system design. RTX PRO Servers deliver up to 3x better price performance for reasoning workloads compared to H100 GPUs using FP8, thanks to the NVIDIA Llama Nemotron Super model running on NVFP4. For digital twin and simulation tasks, the servers deliver up to 4x faster performance than systems using L40S GPUs. Designed for flexibility, RTX PRO Servers support Windows, Linux, and major hypervisors, running on standard air-cooled, PCIe-based x86 systems with enterprise-grade security and manageability. They are backed by NVIDIA AI Enterprise software, including NIM microservices, AI frameworks, and tools. The servers are part of the NVIDIA Enterprise AI Factory validated design and the NVIDIA AI Data Platform, enabling scalable on-premises AI deployment. For physical AI, they support NVIDIA Omniverse and Cosmos world foundation models, enabling digital twin creation, robot simulation, and synthetic data generation. RTX PRO Servers are available from major vendors including Cisco, Dell Technologies, HPE, Lenovo, Supermicro, and others. Cloud providers CoreWeave and Google Cloud already offer instances with the RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell GPU, with AWS, Nebius, and Vultr set to follow later this year.
