PCWorld
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is nothing if not passionate, and as he rattled off the impressive specs for the RTX Spark—a system-on-a-chip that’s powerful enough to run an army of AI agents on laptops and desktops—the outspoken exec laid out an audacious vision of our AI future. “Here’s my theory,” Huang said during Sunday night’s RTX Spark rollout . “I could totally imagine that someday there’s actually an AI supercomputer in your house and it’s running all of your agents, it’s running all of your assistants, and they’re doing all kinds of things for you all the time.” Well, OK, we’ve been told repeatedly that AI agents are the future . But these agents are under our roofs, eh? Huang doubled down: “You have to have it in your house, just like you have a home theater in your house.” He continued: “You want assistant AI agent computers running in your house, and these in time become a lot more like R2-D2 to you.” The advantages of local AI agents at home would be two-fold. They’d save you money on AI subscription fees (kind of), and they’d protect your data privacy when doing things like triaging your email inbox or poring over your bank and other financial statements. It’s a compelling case, and while the initial wave of RTX Spark-powered laptops won’t be the best fit for 24/7 AI agents given that they snooze when their lids are closed , I can eventually see a fleet of mini PC systems that would stay on all the time, complete with RTX Spark-powered AI under their hoods. So that’s Nvidia’s vision for our AI future: teams of agents on our own hardware, locally and privately. (There’s some nuance here, by the way, as Nvidia’s AI architecture will allow for more intensive tasks to be routed to the cloud, while Nvidia the corporation is staking its livelihood on powering gigantic AI data centers.) But there’s also a competing vision, championed by Google: AI that’s mainly in the cloud, powered by Gemini and buttressed by the cloud-based Google tools so many of us already depend on. Fittingly, Google even has its own Spark in the form of Gemini Spark, a 24/7 AI agent that lives in the cloud rather than on local hardware. Like Nvidia’s RTX-powered local agents, Gemini Spark can do your bidding all day and all night, sorting through your email and even parsing your bank statements (if you’re willing to expose them). And while the price of admission is steep—a minimum of $100 per month for a Google AI Ultra subscription—there’s no need to shell out thousands of dollars up front for hardware that will eventually grow outdated. Unlike Nvidia’s privacy-focused “AI supercomputer in your house” concept, Google Spark requires an abdication of privacy in the name of convenience. When Spark rifles through your Gmail, you’re entrusting Google with your data, much like we already do with Gmail, Google Drive, and other core Google services that store our personal files. Also unlike Nvidia, Google’s Spark AI doesn’t depend on local hardware that must be maintained, could be stolen, or is vulnerable to all manner of personal and natural disasters. You’re not on the hook for hardware upgrades, and you can leave security matters to Google (aside from ensuring the integrity of your login credentials, of course). As I’ve noted before that the choice between local and cloud-based AI isn’t truly a binary thing. Nvidia RTX Spark-powered systems will be able to hand off the toughest AI tasks to the cloud, while Google’s latest Android hardware (like Pixel phones and upcoming Googlebooks ) will be able to tackle more mundane AI duties locally. But is Huang correct in predicting an AI supercomputer in every household? Or is the future of AI mainly in the cloud, similar to how roughly half of us depend on cloud-hosted Gmail for our email messages, leaving local AI mainly relegated to AI pros and content creators? 2026 is shaping up to be Spark versus Spark and only time will tell.
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