Dell, Nvidia CEOs to Unveil Dell AI Factory at Dell Tech World
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and Dell CEO Michael Dell will jointly present the Dell AI Factory on May 18 at Dell Technologies World in Las Vegas.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and Dell CEO Michael Dell will deliver a joint keynote at 10 a.m. PT on May 18 to open Dell Technologies World in Las Vegas, a four-day conference running through May 21. The keynote will present the Dell AI Factory, a combined hardware, software and services offering for enterprise AI deployments.
The Dell AI Factory packages Nvidia GPUs with Dell server, storage and networking systems into integrated products enterprises can purchase, deploy and manage. Dell and Nvidia describe the offering as covering hardware, software and managed services to operate AI infrastructure in data centers, on-premises locations and at the network edge.
The current update, called Dell AI Factory 2.0, includes systems built around Nvidia’s new 8-GPU Blackwell accelerators, designed for training and running very large AI models. The refresh adds liquid cooling options and other server updates. Dell has said new server hardware tied to the program is expected to begin shipping in July 2025. On the software side, Nvidia AI Enterprise will be offered through Dell and paired with managed services for Nvidia’s AI stack.
Nvidia supplies the high-performance GPUs used for large models, while Dell supplies enterprise server design, sales and support. At Nvidia’s recent GTC conference, Huang called Dell “the world’s leading computer systems maker.” Michael Dell expects AI infrastructure to sit where enterprise data resides, in public clouds, private data centers or at the edge.
Beyond the joint keynote, Nvidia-led breakout sessions on AI factories and data activation are scheduled for May 18 and 19 to provide technical briefings for customers and partners. The keynote and follow-on sessions will outline how the companies plan to combine hardware, software and services into turnkey options for organizations running AI workloads.




