The Cloud Computer You Actually Own

Oxide Computer Company designs and manufactures the first commercial cloud computer engineered as a single integrated system. Built and assembled in Rochester, Minnesota, the Oxide rack delivers cloud-grade infrastructure that public sector organizations purchase, own, and operate on their own terms. Federal civilian agencies, the Department of Defense, intelligence community customers, and state and local governments use Oxide to consolidate fragmented data center estates, replace expiring VMware deployments, repatriate workloads from public cloud, and stand up sovereign compute environments without the licensing complexity, vendor sprawl, and metered billing that define legacy infrastructure.

A standard Oxide rack ships pre-integrated with compute, networking, storage, and a fully attestable control plane developed end to end by Oxide. Government operators receive a rack that arrives, plugs into power and networking, and runs production workloads within hours of delivery. There is no separate hypervisor license to negotiate, no third-party firmware to vet, no fleet of management tools to stitch together, and no per-core software tax.

Software updates and security patches are included for the supported life of the system, which translates into predictable budgeting cycles and substantially lower three-year total cost of ownership compared to traditional on-premises deployments built from commodity servers and stacked enterprise software.
The Oxide rack is engineered for the operational realities of public sector data centers. Reimagined rack design delivers twice the compute density and twelve times the cooling power efficiency of traditional on-premises infrastructure, allowing agencies to recover floor space, reduce energy costs, and accelerate next-generation digital capabilities without sacrificing performance. Security is built in at every layer rather than bolted on. A hardware root of trust validates firmware from the moment power applies, every component is attested before joining the fabric, and data is encrypted at rest and in transit by default. The result is a zero trust architecture that government operators can verify down to the silicon.

Oxide is NDAA, BAA, and TAA compliant, registered in SAM under CAGE 9BZ23, and accessible to public sector customers through GSA Schedule via Carahsoft, SEWP, and Other Transaction Authority pathways. Capital purchase, list price, no surprises.