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A first look at Microsoft’s Surface Laptop Ultra and Surface Dev Box
The Surface Laptop Ultra. Microsoft has two new Surface devices arriving later this year, both powered by Nvidia's RTX Spark chips. I got a chance to take a closer look at both the Surface Laptop Ultra and Surface RTX Spark Dev Box at Microsoft's Build conference this week, and while both have the same chip inside, they're utilizing Nvidia's RTX Spark in different ways.
The Surface Laptop Ultra is the most powerful Surface yet, thanks to NVIDIA's RTX Spark
The Surface Laptop Ultra is the most powerful Surface yet, thanks to NVIDIA's RTX Spark Microsoft's latest Surface is basically a MacBook Pro clone. Microsoft hasn't had great look with its beefier Surface notebooks. The original Surface Book looked very cool, but it was bulky and cursed with old hardware.
Surface Laptop Ultra: Made for World Makers
Introducing Surface Laptop Ultra: Made for world makers The world is full of makers. Only a few make the world. Surface Laptop Ultra is for them.
Microsoft's Surface Laptop Ultra looks like its first true MacBook Pro competitor
Dell, Asus, Lenovo, HP, MSI, Acer, and Gigabyte are among the PC makers that are designing systems around Nvidia's RTX Spark, Nvidia's new Arm-based chip for Windows PCs. But the flagship RTX Spark PC may be from the same company that makes Windows: the new Microsoft Surface Laptop Ultra is a high-end RTX Spark system that will offer up to 128GB of unified memory for "creators, developers, and AI builders." Microsoft says the Laptop Ultra will be available "later this year" but didn't...
This is the Microsoft Surface Laptop Ultra with Nvidia RTX Spark
This shadowy render is the best glimpse Microsoft is giving us so far. Microsoft Once upon a time, Microsoft had to write off $900 million betting an Arm-based Nvidia chip could power its first flagship Windows portable, the original Microsoft Surface. But today, it's trying again.
Nvidia’s RTX Spark Laptops Look Hell-Bent on Disruption
The moment many have been waiting years for has arrived. Nvidia has long made graphics cards that powered the Windows PC ecosystem for decades—now it wants to control the whole thing with “superchips,” starting with the RTX Spark. Announced over the weekend at the Computex tech expo in Taiwan, RTX Spark chips combine unified memory, RTX graphics, and the new part: the N1 CPU.
NVIDIA's RTX Spark is an AI "superchip" that will power Windows laptops and desktops
NVIDIA's RTX Spark is an AI "superchip" that will power Windows laptops and desktops The company claims it offers 1 petaflop of AI computing power. It was only a matter of time before NVIDIA released a powerful system-on-a-chip (SOC) to take on AMD's Ryzen AI Max and Qualcomm's latest Snapdragon X2 chips. At Computex today, NVIDIA unveiled the RTX Spark, a "superchip" meant to give both laptops and small desktops fast AI and graphics performance.
Microsoft created the mini Surface dev box that Qualcomm couldn’t
Microsoft only just announced a new Surface Laptop Ultra at the weekend, and it's now revealing a miniature Surface PC aimed at developers. The new Surface RTX Spark Dev Box is powered by Nvidia's new Arm-based RTX Spark chips, just like the Surface Laptop Ultra, and is optimized for sustained workloads and local AI tasks. The Surface RTX Spark Dev Box looks a little like the top of an Xbox Series X console, with an aluminum chassis that also doubles as a heatsink.
NVIDIA's RTX Spark chip could give Windows its true Apple Silicon moment
NVIDIA's RTX Spark chip could give Windows its true Apple Silicon moment Arm CPU cores, a powerful GPU and gobs of unified RAM? That sounds familiar! There's a lot we still don't know about NVIDIA's RTX Spark AI chip — we're still waiting on deeper technical details and pricing for the first batch of systems — but it has a decent shot of changing the way we think of Windows PCs entirely.
Microsoft plans Linux tools and an RTX Spark desktop for Windows developers
Microsoft's Build developer conference kicked off today, and as with almost everything the company has done in the last few years, Microsoft's opening keynote focused overwhelmingly on AI and other closely related technologies. There's Microsoft Scout, an OpenClaw-based "Autopilot" agent that can hook into Microsoft 365 data to perform tasks for users; several new AI models; an expanded preview of "Codename MDASH," which is a "multi-model agentic scanning system" meant to detect and fix...