Datavault AI Launches Quantum-Ready HPC GPU Network in New York and Philadelphia
Datavault AI Inc. has activated the first sites of its quantum-ready high-performance computing GPU network in New York and Philadelphia, aiming to provide an alternative source of secure enterprise AI compute capacity amid ongoing GPU supply constraints.

Datavault AI Inc. (NASDAQ: DVLT), a provider of data monetization, credentialing, digital engagement and real-world asset tokenization technologies, announced that the first sites of its quantum-ready high-performance computing (HPC) GPU network are now live in New York and Philadelphia. The company expects full commercial availability of its planned 48,000-GPU fleet by the third quarter of 2026, according to a press release.
The network is designed to operate outside the hyperscaler supply chain, positioning it as an alternative source of secure enterprise AI compute capacity amid ongoing GPU supply constraints. It will scale across 1,000 micro-edge sites in more than 100 U.S. cities and support low-latency AI inference, data tokenization and monetization through the company's IDE(R), DataValue(R) and DataScore(R) platforms.
This launch is significant because it addresses a critical bottleneck in the AI industry: the shortage of GPU computing power. By building a distributed network outside traditional hyperscaler data centers, Datavault AI aims to offer enterprises more accessible and potentially more secure compute resources for AI workloads. The micro-edge architecture also promises low-latency performance, which is essential for real-time AI applications.
Datavault AI's cloud-based platform provides comprehensive solutions serving multiple industries, including HPC software licensing for sports & entertainment, events & venues, biotech, education, fintech, real estate, healthcare, energy and more. The company's Information Data Exchange(R) (IDE) enables Digital Twins and licensing of name, image, and likeness (NIL) by securely attaching physical real-world objects to immutable metadata objects.
For more details, the full press release is available at https://ibn.fm/CDArB. Updates on DVLT can be found in the company's newsroom at https://ibn.fm/DVLT.
The network's rollout comes at a time when demand for AI compute capacity far exceeds supply, driven by the rapid adoption of generative AI and large language models. Datavault AI's approach could help alleviate some of that pressure by providing an alternative to major cloud providers. Additionally, the integration of quantum-ready technology positions the network for future advancements in computing.
Datavault AI is headquartered in Philadelphia, PA. The company's technology suite is customizable and offers AI and Machine Learning (ML) automation, third-party integration, detailed analytics and data, marketing automation and advertising monitoring.