NVIDIA unveiled the RTX Spark Superchip at Computex 2026 in Taipei, marking a major push into Windows on Arm laptops. The processor combines 20 Arm CPU cores with a Blackwell GPU featuring 6,144 CUDA cores and 128GB of unified LPDDR5X RAM.

The platform delivers up to 300 GB/s of memory bandwidth and targets AI workloads that previously required desktop GPUs. Partners including ASUS, Dell, HP, Lenovo, and MSI have committed to RTX Spark-powered machines launching later this year.
NVIDIA also announced Nemotron 3 Ultra, an open model designed for long-running AI agents. The new framework enables developers to build persistent AI assistants that can reason and act over extended periods without losing context.
In media technology, NVIDIA introduced real-time AI building blocks for broadcasters and streaming platforms. The tools handle live production, localization, content analysis, and synthetic video detection—addressing growing demand for authentic content verification.
The company also detailed Intelligent Power Smoothing for the Vera Rubin NVL72 systems, tackling power delivery challenges as AI factories scale. Industry observers see RTX Spark as NVIDIA’s answer to competing Arm-based AI platforms entering the market.


