NVIDIA just scored a massive enterprise win with its new RTX PRO Servers, as major companies including Disney, TSMC, SAP, and Foxconn become early adopters of the Blackwell-powered infrastructure designed to transform traditional data centers into AI factories without complete overhauls. The move signals enterprises are finally ready to make serious AI infrastructure investments beyond experimental deployments.
NVIDIA is making serious inroads into enterprise data centers with a roster of marquee customers that reads like a Fortune 500 directory. The chip giant's new RTX PRO Servers, powered by RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition GPUs, just landed deals with Disney, TSMC, SAP, Foxconn, Hitachi, Hyundai Motor Group, and pharmaceutical giant Lilly — signaling the enterprise AI infrastructure market is hitting an inflection point.
"The age of AI has arrived — and enterprises can no longer rely on classical servers alone. They must rearchitect for AI," NVIDIA founder and CEO Jensen Huang said in the company announcement. The timing couldn't be more telling — as enterprises move from AI experimentation to production deployment, they're discovering their existing infrastructure simply can't handle the workload.
The customer lineup reveals just how broad the AI transformation has become. Disney's Josh D'Amaro highlighted the entertainment angle, noting the technology will power an updated Millennium Falcon experience at Disney parks that debuts alongside "The Mandalorian and Grogu" film. Manufacturing powerhouse Foxconn is deploying the servers for AI-driven automation across robotics, logistics, and electric vehicles. Meanwhile, TSMC — the world's largest contract chip manufacturer — is using RTX PRO Servers to optimize its own semiconductor fabrication operations.
[Embedded image: RTX PRO Server rack deployment in enterprise data center]
The performance numbers behind these enterprise wins are compelling. NVIDIA's Llama Nemotron Super reasoning model delivers up to 3x better price performance when running with NVFP4 on a single RTX PRO 6000 GPU compared to FP8 on H100 GPUs, according to internal benchmarks. For physical AI applications — think digital twins and robotic simulation — the servers deliver up to 4x faster performance than systems with L40S GPUs.
What's particularly strategic about NVIDIA's approach is the positioning of RTX PRO Servers as a bridge technology. Rather than forcing enterprises into complete data center overhauls, the air-cooled, PCIe-based x86 architecture servers can slot into existing infrastructure while supporting Windows, Linux, and leading hypervisors. It's a pragmatic play that acknowledges the reality of enterprise IT — massive organizations don't flip switches overnight.