Nvidia Unveils New PC Processor, Challenging Intel and AMD
The AI chip giant enters the personal computer market with a new Arm-based CPU designed for AI workloads.
L'essentiel
- Nvidia is expanding into the PC processor market with its new N1X CPU, co-developed with Microsoft.
- The chip, built on TSMC's 3nm technology, aims to challenge established players like Intel and AMD by focusing on AI capabilities and energy efficiency, with initial products expected in the fall.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
Nvidia has become the world's most valuable company due to its dominance in AI chips for data centers. The personal computer market has long been dominated by Intel and AMD, with Apple and Qualcomm also significant players. The AI boom is driving significant shifts in the industry, with Arm-based processors gaining traction.
Nvidia has emerged as the world's most valuable company by dominating the market for AI chips in the data center. Now the company is expanding its prowess to chips that will serve as the main processor for personal computers, entering an arena that's long been ruled by Intel , Advanced Micro Devices , Qualcomm and Apple .
During a keynote address at Taiwan's Computex conference on Monday, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang unveiled a new N1X processor made alongside Microsoft . It will be incorporated into a new RTX Spark superchip, debuting in the fall on a fresh line of Windows PCs from Microsoft, Dell , HP , ASUS , Lenovo and MSI.
"This reinvention of the computer is as big of a deal as the reinvention of the phone into what we now know as the smartphone," Huang said, pointing to the fact agentic AI will run across all the new computers.
"Microsoft and Nvidia are going to reinvent the PC," he added. "This is the first completely re-engineered, reinvented line of PCs that has happened in 40 years."
Nvidia's initial plan is to release more than 30 laptops and 10 desktops with the new chip over time, a Nvidia spokesperson said.
The debut PC processor is made up of two flagship types of Nvidia chips fused together, plus 128 gigabytes of unified memory. It pairs one of Nvidia's Blackwell graphics processing units with the new Arm-based custom N1X central processing unit, custom designed by Taiwanese firm MediaTek.
The RTX Spark represents a potentially major shakeup for the PC industry, which is already experiencing significant shifts driven by the AI boom. Arm-based processors like Nvidia's are gaining ground over the traditional x86 processors championed by Intel and AMD, while the overall market for CPUs is exploding into what Huang says will be a $200 billion industry.
Nvidia told CNBC in February that CPUs were "becoming the bottleneck" amid surging agentic AI workflows. The next month, Nvidia unveiled an entire rack filled with its Vera CPUs for data centers. While training large models requires mass amounts of parallel math — excellent work for a GPU — accessing that data and pushing it out to multiple agents requires more general compute offered by a CPU.
Nvidia's new PC processor will be made using Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company 's 3-nanometer technology, currently only available in Taiwan.
Anticipation around Nvidia's Arm-based PC chip has been building for years. Reuters reported that the company was working on the PC chip in 2023, as part of a push by Microsoft to get companies to make Arm-based processors for its computers. A Nvidia spokesperson said it's been working on the chip with Microsoft for "many, many years," adding that it will be "far, far more capable, higher performance, more efficiency" than traditional x86 processors.
Intel is the original pioneer of the x86 instruction set, debuting it in the 1970s. Intel unveiled its new Xeon 6+ data center CPUs at Computex in Taiwan on Monday.
Of late, a flurry of companies have been switching to Arm's alternative power-efficient architecture, which first went mainstream on the original iPhone in 2007.
Now Apple makes Arm-based processors for its own computers, launching a pricier line of MacBooks with its latest M5 chips in March. Arm also unveiled its first in-house CPU that same month, and AMD is also reportedly working towards an Arm-based PC chip.
The first laptops powered by Nvidia's new chip will be as thin as 14 millimeters, carrying a premium price tag, and will also debut in some small desktop models. While RTX Spark will eventually expand to different price points, Nvidia said it's currently targeted toward creators, AI developers and gamers, "looking for very thin and light laptops, slim laptops, portable laptops, or compact desktops."
Nvidia said it will release more performance metrics closer to when the chip hits the market in the fall. For now, RTX Spark is "roughly equivalent" to Nvidia's leading RTX 5070 laptop GPU, according to its spokesperson.
Huang also announced at Computex Monday that Nvidia's Vera CPU for data centers is now in full production. Huang said Nvidia is making millions of the CPUs for "a market that never existed before." Vera will be available starting in the fall. Early customers include Anthropic, OpenAI, SpaceX's xAI, Dell, Oracle and CoreWeave.
"This is going to be our new major growth driver," Huang said. "These CPUs are going to be both performant, but they also have to be extremely energy efficient, so that we can cram as much CPU as we can into the factory without taking away power from the token generation."
"Fast CPUs have become essential to keeping the AI factory moving," said Ian Buck, Nvidia's VP of hyperscale and high performance computing.
Buck said that Vera can produce tokens 1.8 times faster than x86 today, "advancing overall agent token performance, enabling smarter, longer-thinking agents and in the end, generating more data center token revenue."
WATCH: Exclusive first look at Nvidia's Vera Rubin
À surveiller
Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes
Nvidia's RTX Spark processor will lead to a significant shift in PC architecture towards Arm-based designs.
Probable · Moyen terme
Intel and AMD will accelerate their development of AI-focused processors and potentially explore Arm-based solutions to compete.
Très probable · Court terme
The PC market will see a bifurcation between high-performance AI-centric machines and more budget-friendly options.
Possible · Moyen terme
Questions ouvertes
- What will be the exact performance metrics of the RTX Spark compared to existing x86 processors?
- How will Intel and AMD respond to Nvidia's challenge in the PC market?
- What will be the pricing strategy for the RTX Spark beyond the initial premium tier?
- How quickly will the market adopt Arm-based processors for PCs over x86?






