Nvidia’s ‘New Era of PC’ Brings RTX Spark to Microsoft Surface | eWeek

Nvidia’s ‘New Era of PC’ Brings RTX Spark to Microsoft Surface

Microsoft Surface Laptop Ultra in matte black finish displaying an abstract dark wave wallpaper on its high-contrast display.

Image: Microsoft

Written By
David Curry
David Curry
May 31, 2026
2 minute read
eWeek content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More

Microsoft and Nvidia’s teased “New Era of PC” is no longer just a tease.

Nvidia unveiled RTX Spark, a new AI-focused superchip for Windows PCs that will power slim laptops and compact desktops from major manufacturers, including Microsoft Surface, Dell, HP, Lenovo, ASUS, and MSI. The platform is designed for personal AI agents, creators, developers, and gamers, with Nvidia promising up to 1 petaflop of AI performance and up to 128GB of unified memory.

“The PC is being reinvented,” Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said in a press release. “For forty years, you launched apps. Click. Type. With RTX Spark and Microsoft Windows, you ask — and the PC does the work. RTX Spark brings everything NVIDIA has built — CUDA, RTX, our AI platform — into a single superchip. Local agents. Frontier models. Creative workflows. RTX games. All on a laptop. This is the new PC. The personal AI computer.”

For Microsoft, the announcement gives Surface a sharper role in the AI PC race: not just another Windows laptop, but a showcase for local agents, high-end creative workloads, and Nvidia’s full RTX software stack.

Nvidia wants to retain the consumer market

While Nvidia has seen an enormous rise in profitability and its company profile through data centers and servers, the bedrock of AI development, it is also keen to reestablish itself in the consumer PC market. For many years, it was a major provider of GPUs for gaming laptops. 

To that end, it is working with several Windows manufacturers, including Dell and Lenovo, to bring its system-on-chip to their devices.

Intel has been the principal leader in this market for decades, but its market share has been squeezed at the low end by Qualcomm and by manufacturers such as Apple building their own chipsets for laptops. 

Nvidia entering this market with its own integrated unit may be an even graver concern for Intel's future, even though the company has seen its strongest investor sentiment in years.

Consumer laptops refocusing around AI

Microsoft is not the only manufacturer pivoting its hardware around AI. Many Windows OEMs have refocused their marketing and specifications to make their laptops more relevant and capable for AI tools. 

These are not, outside of super high-end systems, aimed at offering local AI inference tasks, like mini-servers. Instead, they are designed to run coding, image generation, translation, and other chatbot tools without major technical issues.

This can also be seen in Apple's current pivot around the Mac mini and MacBook Neo, two reasonably priced computers with enough horsepower to run AI services. Interest in the Mac mini, especially, has surged, as AI developers and power users see it as a powerful computer for running AI agents around the clock.

Also read: Googlebook brings Gemini Intelligence, Android app support, phone integration, and premium hardware to Google’s new AI-first laptop platform.


David Curry

David is a tech journalist and analyst with over a decade’s experience writing for established outlets. He has covered the full spectrum of the tech landscape—mobiles, apps, AI, and everything in-between—delivering news, features, and data-led stories.

eWeek Logo

eWeek has the latest technology news and analysis, buying guides, and product reviews for IT professionals and technology buyers. The site's focus is on innovative solutions and covering in-depth technical content. eWeek stays on the cutting edge of technology news and IT trends through interviews and expert analysis. Gain insight from top innovators and thought leaders in the fields of IT, business, enterprise software, startups, and more.

Property of TechnologyAdvice. © 2026 TechnologyAdvice. All Rights Reserved

Advertiser Disclosure: Some of the products that appear on this site are from companies from which TechnologyAdvice receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site including, for example, the order in which they appear. TechnologyAdvice does not include all companies or all types of products available in the marketplace.