Nvidia Mass-Producing Rubin Architecture for Data Centers

Published on January 20, 2026 | Translated from Spanish
Promotional image of Nvidia's Rubin computing architecture, showing the chip design or a conceptual render of the server platform.

Nvidia Mass-Producing Rubin Architecture for Data Centers

Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of Nvidia, has unveiled this month the details of the Rubin computing architecture. The company confirms that it is already mass-producing these next-generation processors. This step marks the continuous evolution of its solutions for artificial intelligence and data centers. 🚀

Shipments to End Customers Planned for Late Summer

Although manufacturing has already begun, the server supply chain is long. Systems using the Vera Rubin family require time to assemble and distribute. Therefore, Nvidia's partners expect to start shipping these systems to end users near the end of summer. This interval between producing and delivering is common in the industry. ⏳

Key Supply Chain Details:
  • Mass production of Rubin chips is already underway.
  • Assembly of complete servers requires several weeks.
  • Global distribution aligns with the third-quarter calendar.
This gap between manufacturing and delivery is typical in the high-performance data center sector.

Rubin Continues the Annual Refresh Strategy

The Rubin architecture takes over from Blackwell, maintaining the innovation pace that Nvidia has established. The company reinforces its plan to launch a new major platform every year. This approach aims to meet the persistent demand for more power in areas such as AI and scientific computing. Specific technical details will be revealed as general availability approaches. 🔄

Core Roadmap Aspects:
  • Direct successor to the previous Blackwell platform.
  • Main launch cycle consolidated to twelve months.
  • Focus on increasing capacity to process AI workloads.

Industry Preparations

While engineers welcome the new chip, data center administrators are already adjusting their plans for another round of hardware upgrades, a cycle that seems continuous. This announcement requires reevaluating investments and mid-term planning to integrate the new computing power. 💻