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littlemissmartypants

(34,739 posts)
Mon Jun 1, 2026, 04:03 AM 14 hrs ago

Nvidia launches PC chip to bring AI directly to personal computers

Source: Reuters

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, who is in Taiwan for the Computex conference, said the RTX Spark PC chip is part of Nvidia's effort with Microsoft (MSFT.O), opens new tab to "reinvent the PC" ​for the AI era, after three years of collaboration between the companies.

The chip is designed to run AI ​agents locally rather than relying solely on cloud computing. Huang said that it was developed ⁠with Taiwan's MediaTek (2454.TW), opens new tab on the RTX Spark PC chip.

"The RTX Spark looks to transform the traditional app-centric PC to ​a real useful Agentic AI personal computer which will eventually be in every home in coming years as private edge ​AI agents become pivotal," said Neil Shah, Counterpoint Research co-founder.

"This is going to be the 'RTX Spark' moment for the personal computing segment like how iPhone, ChatGPT or DeepSeek have been."

Read more: https://www.reuters.com/world/china/nvidia-ceo-kick-off-dominate-computex-gathering-taipei-2026-05-31/



By Max A. Cherney and Wen-Yee Lee
May 31, 20267:05 PM EDT
Updated 18 mins ago

Nvidia is the world's most valuable company.
7 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Nvidia launches PC chip to bring AI directly to personal computers (Original Post) littlemissmartypants 14 hrs ago OP
Well, sure. They want to offload the work to YOUR PC, e.g. YOUR electrical bill AZJonnie 13 hrs ago #1
No... this isn't a play to create a distributed replacement for datacenters. lapfog_1 13 hrs ago #2
Okay well that doesn't seem all that "revolutionary" AZJonnie 6 hrs ago #7
This orangecrush 9 hrs ago #5
Keep that AI crap off my platform. It is nothing less than a virus spewing inaccurate if not deliberately corrupting Ford_Prefect 10 hrs ago #3
So lonely bird 9 hrs ago #4
Oh, great. All we need is to have almost all PCs running AI agents when even people with lots of highplainsdem 8 hrs ago #6

AZJonnie

(4,099 posts)
1. Well, sure. They want to offload the work to YOUR PC, e.g. YOUR electrical bill
Mon Jun 1, 2026, 04:19 AM
13 hrs ago

I don't think these will be any such revolution because there's not that much benefit to a consumer. Even the BS AI you get in "Google Answers" will still be capable of way more than what you can do running an LLM locally, even with one of these gadgets. Also, people already HAVE this ability. It's called a GPU, or graphics card. I have Ollama running on my GPU right now, locally, unconnected to the internet.

If they put these in people's computers, I'd guess they'll afterwards tell you that what you REALLY should use them for is as part of an "AI Net", so that your computer can be leveraged as just part of one big answer machine, rather than really being a local copy that's just for your use. The AI companies will offer you small discounts in your subscription if you use them this way, that type of thing.

Nothing would be better for their business model that getting people to make their own homes and PC's an actual part of the AI network. Distributed data centers, that the CONSUMER pays the bills on.

lapfog_1

(32,022 posts)
2. No... this isn't a play to create a distributed replacement for datacenters.
Mon Jun 1, 2026, 04:45 AM
13 hrs ago

RTX Spark: A desktop/laptop system-on-a-chip that pairs Blackwell graphics with an Arm CPU. It is highly efficient, drawing just single-digit wattage at idle and scaling up to 80W at full load.

80 watts is probably less than a current laptop CPU with attached laptop GPU.

much less than a deskside CPU... and a deskside CPU paired with a GeForce gamer GPU... try well over 1000 watts.

This isn't for LLM training, but AI inference... and for GPU graphics / CPU general math.

Running AI learning at the edge makes no sense... latency will kill you. So forget doing training operations with a million laptops burning electricity that you pay for.

AZJonnie

(4,099 posts)
7. Okay well that doesn't seem all that "revolutionary"
Mon Jun 1, 2026, 11:27 AM
6 hrs ago

The chip in my S25+ already does some AI stuff locally (like photo editing w/o phoning home).

Also, my desktop system doesn't draw anywhere near 1000W even at full load (I've never seen it hit 400W on my Kill-A-Watt even while stress-testing), with a higher-end GPU and 8 core/16 thread CPU, but I take your point there. And I'd add even with a lot more power than 80W (and 12GB of VRAM) locally-run Ollama is still pretty dang limited.

Ford_Prefect

(8,677 posts)
3. Keep that AI crap off my platform. It is nothing less than a virus spewing inaccurate if not deliberately corrupting
Mon Jun 1, 2026, 07:53 AM
10 hrs ago

information. How can we possibly use such a distorted fantasy to make reliable judgements?

It is potentially as dangerous as Crypto with as little basis in functional reality.

Talk about a fact free universe?????????????

highplainsdem

(63,320 posts)
6. Oh, great. All we need is to have almost all PCs running AI agents when even people with lots of
Mon Jun 1, 2026, 09:41 AM
8 hrs ago

AI training and experience can't always control them, making them a huge security risk.

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