Can Nvidia’s RTX Spark do for Windows what Apple silicon did for Macs?
When Apple launched its first M-series chips in 2020, it didn’t just replace Intel processors inside Macs. It fundamentally changed expectations around what a laptop could be.
Suddenly, users no longer had to choose between performance and battery life. MacBooks became thinner, quieter and significantly more powerful, while a unified memory architecture allowed them to handle everything from video editing to AI workloads with remarkable efficiency.
