Intel’s wild NVIDIA RTX chip could blow up the laptop GPU war
6 Articles
6 Articles
NVIDIA RTX Spark is the new commitment of NVIDIA to bring local AI, advanced graphics and massive unified memory to Windows and mini PC laptops. In this guide I explain to you what all this means, what models are planned and how it stands in front of Snapdragon X Elite and Apple Silicon. What is NVIDIA RTX Spark? Jensen Huang had something important to present in the Computex 2026. That something is NVIDIA RTX Spark, a new SoC for laptops and co…
Intel’s wild NVIDIA RTX chip could blow up the laptop GPU war
Intel's rumored NVIDIA RTX chip could reshape future PCs, but the key details remain missing. The reported 2028 roadmap points to Serpent Lake, RTX graphics, and plenty of unanswered questions.
Lenovo Yoga Pro 9n Design Renders, Key Specifications Leaked; Nvidia RTX Spark-Powered Laptop Could Launch Soon
Lenovo Yoga Pro 9n will be launched as the company's first laptop powered by the recently announced Nvidia RTX Spark chipset, according to a report. The rumoured laptop is said to be launched in Fall 2026 in at least a Thunder Gray colourway. It reportedly shares its metal chassis with the Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i (2026), which was showcased globally earlier this year during the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) 2026. The Lenovo Yoga Pro 9n will reporte…
Lenovo's first RTX Spark PC leaks in images and specs ahead of launch
NVIDIA’s RTX Spark platform is the biggest PC story of 2026 so far, and we’ve been following it closely. We first told you about the chip’s big reveal at Computex, and later covered leaked pricing suggesting these laptops won’t come cheap. NVIDIA named Lenovo, among others, the first brand to launch an RTX Spark PC. Now, the first real look at an actual RTX Spark laptop from Lenovo, called the Lenovo Yoga Pro 9n, has surfaced online. Here’s yo…
NVIDIA's RTX Spark launch is huge, but Qualcomm and Microsoft built the Windows ARM foundation
A few years ago, if you had told me that an ARM-based CPU would launch and be faster than traditional x86 processors, I would have been largely skeptical. At this point, AMD had been dominating the performance charts with their Ryzen and X3D CPUs with Intel not far behind, but it looked like it was team Blue or team Red. Not to mention the, uh, not-so-good reception the Surface RT had. Enter Qualcomm and the Snapdragon X Elite. This announcement…

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