Which Windows devices will use Nvidia SoCs?
Which OEMs are slated for RTX Spark-powered Windows PCs
Nvidia and Microsoft are coordinating a shift in Windows PCs toward Arm-based systems powered by Nvidia SoCs, and multiple major laptop and desktop brands are named as early partners.
Reporting around Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s announcements indicates that the first wave will target mainstream PC makers, with “30+ laptops and 10 desktops” expected to arrive in the fall from the following OEMs:
- Dell
- HP
- Lenovo
- and other unnamed partners
The significance of this lineup is twofold.
First, it signals that Nvidia’s RTX Spark push is meant to be more than a niche experiment. If big-volume vendors produce both laptops and desktops at launch, the company can accelerate software and hardware validation across a broader range of configurations—storage, memory, and thermals will vary widely.
Second, it ties Nvidia’s chip strategy directly to the Windows ecosystem’s momentum on Arm. In the coverage pool, multiple mentions connect the RTX Spark launch to Microsoft planning and unveiling Windows devices built on Nvidia SoCs at major industry events, including Computex and Build.
What remains unclear from the available details is the exact model list for each OEM (specific configurations, screen sizes, and the number of SKUs per brand weren’t provided in the stories). However, the stated goal is clear: a fall rollout of a broad set of Windows devices using Nvidia’s platform, positioning RTX Spark as the foundation for a new generation of AI-capable personal computing.