TAIPEI: In a move that could significantly reshape the future of personal computing, Nvidia on Monday introduced a new generation of AI-focused chips.
The chips are designed to bring artificial intelligence directly to laptops and desktop computers, reducing reliance on cloud-based systems and accelerating the shift toward smarter, more independent devices.
Speaking at the Computex 2026 conference in Taiwan, Nvidia Chief Executive Jensen Huang unveiled the company’s new RTX Spark PC chip, describing it as a major leap toward reinventing the traditional computer for the AI age.
The chip, developed in collaboration with Microsoft after nearly three years of work, is designed to run AI assistants and intelligent software agents locally on laptops and desktops, reducing dependence on cloud computing and making AI-powered experiences faster, more private, and more efficient.
Huang said the RTX Spark chip was also developed alongside Taiwanese semiconductor giant MediaTek, highlighting Taiwan’s growing influence in the global artificial intelligence ecosystem.
Industry experts believe the launch could reshape personal computing by moving users away from traditional app-based systems toward more intelligent, assistant-driven experiences. Instead of manually switching between applications, users may increasingly rely on AI agents capable of handling multiple tasks independently.
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Technology analysts say the development could prove to be a landmark moment for computers, comparing its long-term impact to major technological breakthroughs such as the iPhone and ChatGPT.
Alongside RTX Spark, Nvidia also showcased its new Vera CPU, a processor specifically designed to power advanced AI agents and demanding computing workloads. According to Huang, companies such as OpenAI, Anthropic, and SpaceX are already among its early adopters.
The announcements signal Nvidia’s growing ambitions beyond graphics chips, with the company now aggressively expanding into the personal computing and processor market. During a recent earnings call, Huang described the CPU segment as a $200 billion opportunity, calling Vera a major future growth engine for Nvidia.
During his keynote, Huang also pushed back against fears that artificial intelligence could replace software engineers. Instead, he argued that AI is helping companies hire more technical talent by making developers more productive and enabling faster innovation.
“People keep talking about AI replacing jobs that’s simply not the reality,” Huang suggested, emphasizing that demand for engineers continues to rise as AI adoption accelerates.
Huang, who was born in Tainan, Taiwan, also underscored the island’s growing importance in global technology, recently announcing plans to invest approximately $150 billion annually in Taiwan, calling it the centre of the ongoing AI revolution.
The unveiling comes as the global technology race intensifies, with major firms competing to dominate the next era of artificial intelligence, semiconductor innovation, and advanced computing.
The Computex trade show, one of the world’s biggest technology events, runs from June 2 to June 5, bringing together some of the largest names in the tech industry.

















