The funny part is that Nvidia isn't only a gaming hardware, but the hype is falsely very much on the gaming potential of these new chips - which they are not designed for.
So these are for AI/DL workflows and what not, fine. More hardware for the AI bubble, fine. It's priced accordingly too, fine.
Not sure this makes sense for a video editing workstation vs a Mac Studio, especially with Windows on ARM sucking so much and linux having little pro-grade editing software support, but hey to each their own.
So why are we talking about it as if it's a mainstream/prosumer product that will revolutionalize the market? It's Nvidia, that's it.
HP just announced the OmniBook Ultra 16 and OmniBook X 14, the world's thinnest laptops powered by the new Nvidia RTX Spark superchip. Featuring up to 128GB of unified memory and Blackwell GPU architecture, these next-gen AI PCs are designed to run complex local agents and advanced creative workflows for developers and power users, launching later in 2026.