Nvidia’s chief executive used the GTC Taipei keynote to declare its next platform shipping and to reveal RTX Spark, an Arm-based Windows machine.
Jensen Huang got the keynote slot, as he tends to. Nvidia’s chief executive opened Computex 2026 in Taipei on Monday with the speech the rest of the week is built around, and he used it to make two claims: that the company’s next-generation Vera Rubin platform is now in full production, and that Nvidia is moving into the one part of computing it has largely sat out, the Windows PC.The keynote, delivered at the Taipei Music Center at 11am local time, doubled as GTC Taipei, Nvidia’s developer conference.
Huang said Vera Rubin, the pairing of the in-house Vera CPU with the Rubin GPU, has reached full production, and claimed Nvidia now has the lowest token cost in the world for AI inference, a function of designing the chips and the rack as one system.The newer move was RTX Spark, an all-in-one Arm-based Windows machine.
Nvidia said it combines a 20-core Grace CPU, developed with MediaTek, and a Blackwell GPU with 6,144 CUDA cores, up to 128GB of memory, and what the company puts at one petaflop of AI performance.Jensen Huang announced three Windows products built around it: RTX Spark laptops, RTX Spark desktops, and a DGX Station for Windows aimed at developers who work outside the Linux ecosystem.










