TL;DR
- RTX Spark Launch: Nvidia and Microsoft have introduced RTX Spark Windows PCs for developers, creators and power users.
- Local AI Hardware: GB10 pairs Grace CPU with Blackwell GPU, targeting 1 petaflop performance and 128GB unified memory.
- Windows Integration: Workload scheduling, Prism emulation and unified-memory tuning are meant to support larger local models.
- Premium Pricing: GB10 systems could cost $3,000 to $4,000, keeping early demand focused on premium buyers.
Nvidia and Microsoft at Computex 2026 introduced RTX Spark for Windows PCs for developers, creators and power users, pushing the GB10 Grace Blackwell line into premium Windows hardware.
RTX Spark is a groundbreaking, consumer-grade “Superchip” processor co-developed with MediaTek that is designed to power the next generation of premium Windows on Arm AI PCs.
Nvidia is pitching RTX Spark as a higher-end local AI tier for buyers who need more than lightweight assistant features on a notebook. Its hardware case starts with 1 petaflop of AI performance and a design meant to keep heavier model work on the device instead of sending every demanding task to cloud servers.
Shared memory is a major part of that pitch. It provides 128GB of unified memory, which keeps CPU and GPU workloads closer to the same data pool as models grow larger. Developers, creators and other power users could benefit if that setup makes demanding local inference more practical on a notebook.
How RTX Spark Extends Nvidia’s AI PC Push
At the chip level, GB10 pairs Grace CPU with Blackwell GPU in one package. RTX Spark is also positioned around 200 billion-parameter local models, pushing it closer to workstation-style AI use than to the smaller assistant features common in mainstream AI laptops.
Microsoft is tying that hardware to workload profile scheduling and Prism emulation. Windows is also being tuned for unified-memory optimization on RTX Spark systems. Software compatibility sits near the center of the launch story, because premium AI laptops need app support and memory handling that hold up once buyers move beyond keynote demos. Enterprise buyers will also watch how well older Windows software behaves on the new machines.
Major OEM support is supposed to arrive quickly. The first RTX Spark systems could ship this fall from Surface, ASUS, Dell, HP, Lenovo and MSI, giving Microsoft a first-party device and Nvidia a broader early test of pricing, battery tradeoffs and buyer appetite. That rollout should reveal whether RTX Spark can become a real premium category instead of a single showcase design.
Nvidia is also linking RTX Spark to keeping heavier workloads local. Vince Hu, MediaTek corporate senior vice president overseeing compute platforms, data center solutions and IoT businesses, framed the launch as a path to local AI supercomputing in consumer PCs. His view reinforces Nvidia’s argument that latency, cost control and data locality can matter as much as raw benchmark claims for expensive notebooks.
Prism emulation and workload scheduling matter because they affect whether a premium AI notebook can run older Windows apps while also handling larger local models without obvious tradeoffs in compatibility or responsiveness.
Project Digits Roots and the Wider AI PC Field
RTX Spark extends an older product line rather than opening a fresh architecture chapter. Nvidia’s Project Digits launch in 2025 established GB10 as a desktop AI system, while an earlier Windows-on-Arm laptop path pointed toward broader PC ambitions before the current push reaches major notebook brands. Nvidia’s GB10 CES 2025 debut adds another marker that this is an extension of a longer hardware plan rather than a sudden one-show announcement.
Price will help determine how far that expansion can go. GB10-based systems could land between $3,000 and $4,000, which would keep the first wave aimed at the premium end of the market. AMD already offers AI PC parts in its expanded Ryzen AI 400 series portfolio.
AMD says some of those chips reach up to 50 TOPS of AI compute, giving Windows laptop buyers another benchmark for local AI performance. Apple Silicon notebooks already set a high Arm-based comparison point. If RTX Spark ships on schedule, buyers will decide whether bigger local models and premium hardware justify the extra cost.

