Singularity Compute, the for-profit infrastructure arm of decentralized AI pioneer SingularityNET, has unveiled the Phase I deployment of its first enterprise-grade NVIDIA GPU cluster in Sweden. Developed in collaboration with Swedish data-center operator Conapto at a modern, sustainability-focused facility, the cluster is designed to power enterprise AI workloads, support ASI Alliance ecosystem projects, and fuel the ASI:Cloud AI inference platform.
The cluster offers flexible GPU computing through bare metal rentals, virtual machine-based rentals, and dedicated inference API endpoints, enabling organizations to access high-performance compute for training, fine-tuning, inference, and R&D workloads. This modular approach caters to diverse applications from bursty development to mission-critical production inference.
Joe Honan, CEO of Singularity Compute, stated: "With our Phase I launch in Sweden, Singularity Compute is taking a major step toward building the global infrastructure backbone for Artificial Superintelligence. Our enterprise-grade NVIDIA GPUs deliver the performance and reliability modern AI demands, while remaining aligned with our core principles of openness, security and sovereignty." Dr. Ben Goertzel, CEO and founder of SingularityNET and the ASI Alliance, emphasized the ethical imperative: "As AI accelerates toward AGI and beyond, access to high-performance, ethically aligned compute is becoming a defining factor in who shapes the future." He added that Singularity Compute provides scalable, secure infrastructure for both enterprise partners and decentralized AI projects.
The GPU cluster underpins ASI:Cloud, Singularity Compute's AI model inference service developed jointly with CUDOS, the Web3 arm of CUDO and an ASI Alliance member. ASI:Cloud offers OpenAI-compatible APIs and a scaling path from serverless inference to dedicated endpoints. Operational management is handled by CUDO, an NVIDIA cloud partner, ensuring enterprise-grade reliability and uptime.
This initial deployment in Sweden marks Singularity Compute's first step, with plans for additional hardware and new locations as demand grows from enterprises and ASI Alliance partners. The rollout is positioned as a milestone in establishing decentralized, equitable access to AI compute resources globally.