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MIAMI - Digi Power X Inc. (NASDAQ:DGXX / TSXV: DGX) announced Monday that its subsidiary, US Data Centers, Inc., has filed a provisional utility patent application for its ARMS 200 platform, a modular data center solution designed for high-density GPU clusters.
The Tier 3-certified ARMS 200 platform can deliver 1 megawatt of compute capacity per pod and support up to 256 NVIDIA B200/B300 GPUs. The company plans to scale the platform to 40 MW of critical power at its Alabama site, potentially supporting approximately 10,240 NVIDIA GPUs.
According to a company press release, the ARMS 200 integrates liquid cooling and dual-path power redundancy. It is being developed in collaboration with Super Micro Computer, Inc. (NASDAQ:SMCI), a prominent player in the Technology Hardware sector with a market capitalization of $32.5 billion and impressive revenue growth of 82.5% over the last twelve months, and built to support NVIDIA’s Blackwell-class architecture.
"This provisional patent is the first step to protect the foundational architecture of our ARMS 200 platform," said Michel Amar, Chief Executive Officer of Digi Power X.
The company previously placed a purchase order with Supermicro for NVIDIA B200-powered systems, with initial deployment scheduled for the fourth quarter of 2025.
Digi Power X reports having over $30 million in cash and cash equivalents with no long-term debt as of July 28, 2025.
The ARMS 200 filing is described as the first in a series of modular systems under development, including upcoming ARMS 300 and ARMS 400 platforms targeted at enterprise and government AI infrastructure. For detailed analysis of companies in the AI infrastructure space, including 15+ additional ProTips and comprehensive financial metrics, visit InvestingPro.
In other recent news, Digi Power X Inc. has announced a significant purchase order with Super Micro Computer Inc. for NVIDIA B200-powered systems. These systems are set to enhance Digi Power X’s NeoCloud AI infrastructure platform and will be integrated into the company’s ARMS 200 pods. The deployment is planned for the Alabama site, with operations expected to begin in the fourth quarter of 2025. Meanwhile, Super Micro Computer has started shipping new 4-socket server systems powered by Intel Xeon 6 processors. These servers are designed to handle enterprise database and mission-critical workloads, offering up to 344 cores per system. Additionally, Citi has raised its price target for Super Micro Computer to $52 from $37, maintaining a Neutral rating. The firm cited ongoing demand for Super Micro’s products, particularly in the sovereign and enterprise AI markets, despite characterizing this demand as "lumpy."
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