The moment many have been waiting years for has arrived. Nvidia has long made graphics cards that powered the Windows PC ecosystem for decades—now it wants to control the whole thing with “superchips,” starting with the RTX Spark.
Announced over the weekend at the Computex tech expo in Taiwan, RTX Spark chips combine unified memory, RTX graphics, and the new part: the N1 CPU. Nvidia already owns the entire world of AI processed in data centers with its GPUs. But now it's making its play for locally run AI too. It's just a tease of what's to come right now, but these are the first Windows devices that may actually live up to the overused “AI PC” name.
The Fake AI PC
Microsoft has been talking up the idea of “AI PCs” since 2024, but it has never felt real. Sure, its Copilot+ PCs had built-in neural processing units (NPUs) and started with 16 GB of RAM, but they didn't have the performance to run large language models locally any more than your phone. Rather than build the hype machine around AI, Microsoft's early promises about the next era of the PC felt empty.
While they need to be tested, and prices are still undetermined, these new Nvidia laptops look truly like real AI PCs. The combination of unified memory up to 128 GB, an efficient Arm-based CPU, and the company's trademark RTX graphics cards gives you a computer unheard of outside the MacBook Pro. This competition is important as the MacBook Pro (or Mac desktops) was the only serious option for AI enthusiasts looking to run foundation-level models locally.







English (US)