Nvidia Unveils New AI PC Processor to Power the Next Generation of Laptops

If you thought your laptop was already smart enough, Nvidia just raised the bar in a way nobody saw coming. At the Computex 2026 trade show in Taipei, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang took the stage to unveil the company’s bold new strategy to take on Intel and AMD, a powerful new line of processors called the RTX Spark Superchip. And this isn’t just another chip upgrade. It’s a fundamental rethink of what a personal computer is supposed to do.

Nvidia describes the RTX Spark as a new superchip that reinvents Windows PCs for the era of personal AI agents, offering a new class of computer that moves from tool to teammate. Jensen Huang put it plainly: “For forty years, you launched apps. Click. Type. With RTX Spark and Microsoft Windows, you ask ,and the PC does the work.”

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So what exactly is inside this thing? The RTX Spark superchip combines a 20-core Nvidia Grace CPU with a Blackwell RTX GPU featuring 6,144 CUDA cores and fifth-generation Tensor Cores with FP4 precision, connected using Nvidia’s NVLink chip-to-chip interconnect.   The superchip can deliver up to 1 petaflop of AI performance and support up to 128GB of unified memory. For context, that kind of memory capacity on a laptop was practically science fiction just a few years ago.

The product is a combination of microprocessor and graphics chip, built with help from Taiwan’s MediaTek, that will run Microsoft’s Windows for Arm operating system.  Nvidia said it has worked with Microsoft for years to prepare the new devices and ensure software support that will make Arm technology finally take hold in the Windows PC world.

What makes this particularly exciting for everyday users is what the chip actually enables. Nvidia is effectively redefining what “using a PC” means. Instead of relying on traditional mouse-and-keyboard workflows, users would interact with natural language prompts ,systems that don’t just respond to commands but actively plan, execute tasks, and refine outputs over time. Think of it as having a genuinely capable assistant built directly into your machine, not tethered to the cloud.

New Nvidia-based machines will be better able to cope with AI models and functionality in commonly used software. Adobe’s Photoshop, for example, is being reworked to better respond to AI-based prompts to generate image and video content. The new devices will also boost gaming capabilities, allowing laptops to handle high-end titles.

The rollout is happening sooner than you might expect. The RTX Spark Superchip will be available this autumn in laptops and desktop computers from leading PC brands, including Dell Technologies and Lenovo Group. RTX Spark will also power the new Surface Laptop Ultra from Microsoft, as well as the Dell XPS 16, along with systems from every major OEM.

This is a landmark moment not just for Nvidia, but for the PC industry as a whole. The RTX Spark is set to compete with AMD’s Ryzen AI Max and Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X2 chips, while Nvidia claims its performance is comparable to the RTX 5070 laptop GPU at significantly lower power consumption. Coming from a company that already dominates AI in data centers, this push into the consumer space signals that the AI PC era isn’t approaching , it has arrived. The only question left is whether your next laptop will have a Spark under the hood.

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