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NVIDIA Blog

GeForce NOW Turns Up the Heat With New GeForce RTX 5080-Powered Toronto Server NVIDIA Nemotron Achieves Benchmark-Leading Performance With LangChain Deep Agents Harness AI Innovators Adopt NVIDIA Vera — Why Max Single-Threaded CPU at Scale Matters NVIDIA and Hugging Face Bring New Models and Frameworks to LeRobot for the Open Robotics Community How Open Models Are Driving AI Research How Nations Are Deploying AI for Strategic Priorities Joyride Through July With 12 Games Coming to GeForce NOW NVIDIA Unlocks AI Compute at Scale, Inviting Partners to Power the AI Infrastructure Buildout NVIDIA and Partners Build in America, for America NVIDIA BioNeMo Agent Toolkit Brings Accelerated AI to Life Sciences Researchers in Claude Science How NVIDIA’s Inference Software Stack Powers the Lowest Token Cost How Jaiveer Singh Is Helping Robots — and Developers — Move Faster Into the Omniverse: Three Workflows for Improving Vision AI Agent Accuracy With Synthetic Data and Fine-Tuning Claude Meets Blackwell Ultra: Anthropic’s Models Now Run on NVIDIA GB300 in Azure Firefly Aerospace Operates NVIDIA Jetson in Lunar Orbit for the First Time Open Models, Closed Environments: Palantir Brings Secure AI to US Agencies With NVIDIA Nemotron The Ultimate Summer Sale Pairing: Steam Sale Meets GeForce NOW Discounts How Businesses Are Building Specialized AI They Can Trust
NVIDIA and AWS Collaborate to Bring AI to Production at Scale
Josiah Byers · 2026-06-24 · via NVIDIA Blog

Building AI systems at scale is demanding, requiring low-latency inference, fast vector search, strong GPU price-performance and infrastructure that can grow without multiplying operational complexity. 

NVIDIA’s latest work with Amazon Web Services (AWS) addresses each of those constraints. Across Amazon OpenSearch and Amazon EC2, NVIDIA AI infrastructure is giving enterprises more practical paths to deploy AI at production scale. 

EC2 G7 instances powered by NVIDIA RTX PRO 4500 Blackwell Server Edition GPUs expand the compute layer for AI, graphics, video and data analytics workloads, while the NVIDIA cuVS library accelerates the retrieval layer by making GPU-powered vector indexing the default in OpenSearch Serverless. And with AWS achieving NVIDIA Exemplar Cloud status for NVIDIA GB300, customers can trust they’re receiving peak optimized performance for their training workloads.

NVIDIA RTX PRO 4500 Blackwell Server Edition Multi-Workload GPUs Power New Amazon EC2 G7 Instances

Amazon EC2 G7 instances bring NVIDIA RTX PRO 4500 Blackwell Server Edition GPUs to AWS for AI inference, graphics, spatial computing and GPU-accelerated data analytics — delivering a new instance type engineered for production workloads that need performance without the operational overhead of a customer-managed GPU platform.

Compared with G6 instances, G7 delivers up to 4.6x AI inference performance, up to 2.1x graphics performance and significantly faster GPU-accelerated data analytics on Amazon EMR using the NVIDIA cuDF library for Apache Spark workloads. 

With support for up to eight GPUs, 256GB of total GPU memory, 700 Gbps of EFA-enabled networking and up to 7.6TB of local NVMe SSD storage — across one-, two-, four- and eight- GPU configurations plus bare metal, coming soon — G7 instances let customers right-size infrastructure for their workloads instead of over-provisioning for them.

The platform’s versatility means AI teams get lower-latency inference. Media and entertainment teams get high-resolution video workflows and rendering. Simulation, computer-aided design, virtual desktop infrastructure, gaming and spatial computing teams get the same instance type for graphics-intensive applications. And data teams can apply the GPU memory, local storage and networking improvements to analytics pipelines and vector database workloads. 

G7 instances are accessible through AWS Deep Learning Amazon Machine Images (AMIs), Amazon Deep Learning Containers, Amazon EMR, Amazon EKS, Amazon ECS and graphics AMIs — and coming soon to Amazon SageMaker AI.

NVIDIA cuVS Makes GPU-Accelerated Vector Search the Default in Amazon OpenSearch

The next generation of Amazon OpenSearch Serverless powers agentic AI and dynamic workloads with no infrastructure management required. It uses GPU-accelerated vector indexing, powered by NVIDIA cuVS, as the default compute choice for all vector collections.

For teams building retrieval-augmented generation, semantic search, recommendation systems and agentic AI applications, that shift matters. It turns GPU-powered vector search from a specialized optimization project into a standard AWS capability.

The customer impact is direct: vector indexing up to 10x faster at a quarter of the cost, compared with CPU-only builds — making billion-scale vector databases practical to build in under an hour. 

By making NVIDIA cuVS the default in OpenSearch Serverless, AWS customers get a much faster path from raw data to production-ready AI retrieval infrastructure — with serverless scaling that reduces operational overhead when workloads are idle.

AWS Achieves NVIDIA Exemplar Cloud Status for GB300 Training Performance

AWS has achieved NVIDIA Exemplar Cloud status on NVIDIA GB300 for training workloads. This means AWS meets the rigorous performance thresholds that NVIDIA uses to benchmark AI workloads against its reference architecture. 

This achievement is the result of deep co-engineering efforts between AWS and NVIDIA teams. Through the NVIDIA Exemplar Clouds initiative, developers and AI leaders can be confident they’re using consistent, high-performance cloud infrastructure for large-scale training, helping teams evaluate cloud providers with greater confidence, improve total cost of ownership and move AI projects from planning to production more efficiently.

Together, these advancements reinforce every layer of the AI infrastructure stack on AWS. The throughline is the same: production-grade AI infrastructure that performs at scale, without adding operational burden to the teams running it.

Learn more in this AWS blog.