Nvidia chips

Winsage
June 1, 2026
NVIDIA is preparing to enter the Windows PC market with at least two distinct ARM chip product tiers, the N1 and N1X, although these remain unverified. The N1X will have two configurations: a larger variant with 20 CPU cores (10+10 layout), 48 Blackwell Streaming Multiprocessors (6,144 CUDA cores), and a smaller variant with 18 CPU cores (9+9 layout) and 40 SMs (5,120 CUDA cores). The power envelope for the N1X models is projected to be between 45 to 80 watts. The smaller N1 variant is expected to have a power range of 18 to 45 watts and up to 20 SMs. Retailer listings suggest that Lenovo may offer models like the Yoga Pro 7 15.3 with NVIDIA N1X configurations and options for 32 GB RAM and 1 TB SSD. NVIDIA and Microsoft plan to unveil the first Windows PCs featuring NVIDIA chips, with potential vendors including Microsoft’s Surface brand and Dell. The success of the Windows-on-Arm platform will depend on factors beyond CUDA core count, such as native applications, drivers, power management, and gaming compatibility. NVIDIA's extensive resources, including CUDA and AI frameworks, may give it an advantage over competitors like Qualcomm.
Winsage
June 1, 2026
An Nvidia-powered Windows PC is set to launch this week, with teasers from Microsoft, Nvidia, and Arm Holdings suggesting a new era of personal computing. The launch is expected to occur at the Computex trade show in Taiwan and Microsoft’s Build developer conference in San Francisco. Pavan Davuluri, head of Windows, hinted at new developments for developers that are not related to a new OS version. Microsoft plans to introduce software that allows users to deploy AI agents for local tasks on Windows machines. Nvidia is reportedly developing CPUs for Windows devices using technology from Arm Holdings to compete with Intel. Nvidia previously had a presence in the PC market, as seen with the Microsoft Surface RT tablets that used Nvidia’s Tegra 3 ARM processor in 2012.
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