Nvidia Enters Windows Laptop Market, Taking on Intel and AMD
The Arm-based superchip combines a Blackwell GPU and custom CPU to run local AI agents, creative tools and games on Windows laptops.
- Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang officially unveiled the "RTX Spark" Superchip, an Arm-based consumer processor designed to run advanced, autonomous AI agents locally on personal computers without relying on cloud computing.
- Developed in partnership with MediaTek and manufactured on TSMC's 3-nanometer node, the hardware fuses a 20-core Nvidia Grace CPU with a Blackwell-architecture GPU featuring 6,144 CUDA cores and up to 128GB of unified memory.
- The platform targets a "premium" market segment of developers, creators, and gamers, boasting the performance power to render massive 90GB 3D scenes, edit 12K video, and run AAA video games at 1440p resolution exceeding 100 frames per second.
- Nvidia partnered with Microsoft to integrate a specialized software layer called OpenShell, which allows Windows 11 users to build and run private AI assistants locally while establishing strict security policies to mask personal data before any cloud interaction.
- The new chips will debut this autumn in a fresh lineup of slim, power-efficient Windows laptops and desktops from major industry manufacturers, including ASUS, Dell, HP, Lenovo, MSI, and Microsoft’s own Surface brand.
189 Articles
189 Articles
Nvidia presented new and powerful chips that would bring advanced Artificial Intelligence (IA) functions to laptops and desktop computers, in order to bring to the market new models of personal computers of brands such as Microsoft and Dell later this year. Although Nvidia has already had a huge success supplying high-end chips for data centers driven by the global surge of AI demand, it is drawing up different plans to expand its presence in sy…
Nvidia launches new chip to bring AI directly to personal computers
TAIPEI — Nvidia on Monday unveiled a new chip that puts artificial intelligence capabilities directly into laptops and desktop computers, pitting i...
The worldwide PC market is on the move. Nvidia announced so-called RTX Spark laptops, which are to be based on Windows. The chip manufacturer thus competes with US companies such as Intel and AMD.
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