Jensen Huang used this week’s developer-conference circuit to outline a new kind of laptop built around running AI models locally, alongside a new vision for how people would use PCs.
Nvidia’s pitch goes beyond faster hardware: the company is arguing that AI agents and on-device models could reshape everyday laptop workflows, not just add another feature.
Products cited around that push include Nvidia’s RTX Spark, as Microsoft Build and Google I/O also showcased AI-heavy projects such as Gemini Spark, Scout and Solara.
The broader question hanging over the rollout is whether consumers actually want laptops redesigned around AI workloads, or whether a more powerful conventional PC is enough.