Supermicro introduced a series of integrated solutions at COMPUTEX 2025 designed to accelerate AI data center buildouts, enhance enterprise AI deployment, and support cost-efficient entry-class computing. The company’s Data Center Building Block Solutions (DCBBS) serve as a framework for designing, deploying, and managing full-scale liquid-cooled AI data centers. These modular systems streamline the process from system-level configuration to complete rack and data center integration, supporting AI training, inference, and general-purpose computing at scale.
DCBBS offers pre-validated scalable units, including configurations with up to 256 liquid-cooled 4U systems built with NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs. Each system houses eight GPUs, supporting up to 2,048 GPUs interconnected via NVIDIA Quantum-X800 InfiniBand or Spectrum-X Ethernet. The solution includes elastically scalable PCIe Gen5 NVMe storage, data lake nodes, and resilient management infrastructure. Supermicro’s DLC-2 technology enables up to 40% power savings, a 60% smaller footprint, and up to 40% reduction in water use compared to traditional air-cooled systems.
In tandem with DCBBS, Supermicro announced a new portfolio of more than 20 enterprise systems built with the NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition GPUs. These include NVIDIA-Certified Systems for use in NVIDIA Enterprise AI Factory validated designs. The offerings cover a range of server types—from 5U and 4U GPU-dense systems to NVIDIA MGX-based and edge-optimized platforms—targeting AI inference, training, graphics, simulation, and content creation. A new 4-GPU single-socket system, based on the MGX design, brings AI processing closer to the edge for industrial and business applications.
Supermicro also expanded its AMD-based portfolio with new MicroCloud multi-node systems powered by the AMD EPYC™ 4005 Series processors. Designed for entry-class workloads, these 3U platforms support up to 10 independent nodes per chassis, achieving 3.3x greater compute density than traditional 1U servers. With TDPs as low as 65W, support for DDR5 memory, and PCIe Gen5 expansion, these systems are optimized for web hosting, cloud gaming, and content delivery networks, providing space and energy savings for SMBs and service providers.