New Delhi, June 14 -- spend the better part of $4,000 on a Linux workstation aimed at enterprise developers, or rent the compute from a cloud you did not control. Nvidia changed the terms of that equation at Computex 2026 in Taipei.

The company unveiled the RTX Spark, a superchip it built in close partnership with Microsoft over several years, and announced that laptops and compact desktop PCs carrying the chip would reach consumers in the fall of 2026. The hardware brings together a 20-core Arm-based CPU - derived from Nvidia's Grace architecture and co-developed with MediaTek - and a Blackwell-generation RTX GPU with 6,144 CUDA cores, all connected through Nvidia's NVLink chip-to-chip interconnect. The memory pool, shared between the C...