Jensen Huang wants you to stop clicking. During his keynote at GTC Taipei on June 1, the Nvidia CEO declared that the decades-old paradigm of interacting with computers through keyboards, mice, and screens is effectively over, replaced by AI agents that listen, understand, and act on your behalf.

The centerpiece of the announcement is the RTX Spark superchip, developed in partnership with Microsoft, which Huang positioned as the hardware backbone for turning Windows PCs from passive tools into what he described as proactive teammates. Instead of opening apps and navigating menus, users will simply state their objectives in plain language and let AI agents handle the rest.

From clicking to conversing

The RTX Spark chip is designed to run AI agents locally on a PC, meaning the conversational interface doesn’t rely entirely on cloud processing. Think of it less like asking Siri to set a timer and more like telling a capable assistant to research a topic, draft a report, format it, and email it to your team, all from a single spoken or typed instruction.

Nvidia also introduced its OpenShell runtime and NemoClaw stack, two pieces of infrastructure specifically built for deploying these agentic AI systems securely, particularly in enterprise environments where data sensitivity matters.