GIGABYTE (Giga Computing) vs MiTAC Computing (TYAN) for NVIDIA AI servers.
Side by side from our vendor index: what each firm actually designs, which NVIDIA platforms it ships, and the identity facts that shape a procurement decision. Sources and full detail live on each profile.
GIGABYTE (Giga Computing)
Giga Computing designs one of the broadest NVIDIA server catalogs in the market, from PCIe boxes to GB300 NVL72 racks, and sells it through channel with unusually public specs and pricing. Frequently the best spec-per-dollar quote in the ODM tier.
- Decades of in-house motherboard and server engineering heritage predating the 2023 spin-off
- G893 series: air-cooled rack supporting HGX B300 NVL16, up to 32 GPUs per rack
- G4L3 series: 4U liquid-cooled server with cold plates on all 8 GPUs and 2 CPUs
- G894-SD3-AAX7: 8U flagship on NVIDIA HGX B300
MiTAC Computing (TYAN)
MiTAC absorbed Intel's datacenter systems business and owns the Tyan brand, giving it decades of board-level server engineering. It designs HGX and MGX systems sold through channel and direct, one of the more accessible ODMs for mid-size buyers.
- In-house TYAN-brand motherboard and server engineering heritage dating to 1989
- Absorbed Intel's Data Center Solutions Group server designs and IP via the July 2023 acquisition
- R1917GC: in-house MGX-based management server (NVIDIA Grace or Vera CPU), shown at GTC 2026
- Next-gen G-series 4U AI server on NVIDIA MGX (dual AMD EPYC Venice plus up to 8 double-width GPUs)
The right vendor depends on the workload, the facility and the timeline, not the brand. The assessment sizes both against your requirements and returns quoted pricing, with our margin disclosed.
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