Nvidia is moving into laptops — and wants the AI inside the machine
With the RTX Spark chip, Nvidia steps into Windows PCs. The promise: run giant AI models locally, without sending everything to the cloud.
Nvidia made its name on graphics cards and the chips that power half the planet’s artificial intelligence. Now it wants to move into a place it’s never been: inside your laptop. At Computex in Taiwan, it unveiled the RTX Spark (also called the N1X), a “superchip” built for Windows PCs.
The spec sheet raises an eyebrow: up to 20 Arm-based CPU cores, a Blackwell GPU and 128GB of unified memory. In plain terms — the machine can run AI models with 120 billion parameters locally, meaning it doesn’t need to send your questions off to someone else’s cloud.
Why it’s interesting
The selling point is privacy. If the AI’s “brain” lives on your computer, your data isn’t wandering around the internet. Nvidia also added a system that decides what stays on the machine and what goes out, masking personal information when it does have to reach for the cloud.
The first laptops — from the likes of Dell, HP, Asus, Lenovo, Microsoft and MSI — arrive in the autumn. It’s not here yet and it won’t be cheap, but it marks a clear direction: AI is leaving the data centre and coming onto your desk.
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