Nvidia Unveils RTX Spark Superchip for AI-Powered PCs

RTX Spark pairs an Arm-based Grace CPU and Blackwell GPU with 128GB unified memory to run local AI agents on Windows laptops and compact desktops, with partners including Microsoft and major PC makers; shipping this fall.

Overview

A summary of the key points of this story verified across multiple sources.

1.

Nvidia unveiled the RTX Spark superchip at Computex and said it will debut this fall in laptops and compact desktops from Microsoft, Dell, HP, Lenovo, ASUS and MSI.

2.

Nvidia said RTX Spark combines an Arm-based Grace CPU, a Blackwell GPU and 128 gigabytes of unified memory to run local AI agents, and Nvidia described the chip as a 1-petaflop "superchip."

3.

CEO Jensen Huang said RTX Spark aims to let users "ask — and the PC does the work," and Nvidia said more than 100 Windows software makers have signed on to support the chip.

4.

Nvidia said it plans more than 30 laptops and 10 desktops with the chip, and industry reactions were mixed as HP said devices helped sales while Dell said demand fell short and Nvidia stock rose about 5.5%.

5.

Nvidia said it will release more performance metrics closer to shipping this fall, and it also said its Vera data-center CPU is in full production and will be available starting in the fall with early customers including Anthropic, OpenAI, SpaceX's xAI, Dell, Oracle and CoreWeave.

Written using shared reports from
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Analysis

Compare how each side frames the story — including which facts they emphasize or leave out.

Center-leaning sources frame Nvidia's RTX Spark as an unquestioned industry breakthrough by foregrounding company and friendly analyst quotes, repeating marketing superlatives, and minimizing critical perspectives (privacy, consumer cost, competition). Editorial choices - lead placement of corporate claims, selective expert voices, and lack of skeptical sources - produce a pro-industry, promotional tilt.