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Computex 2026: ASUS launches ProArt P16, ProArt P14 powered by RTX Spark Superchip

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Following the announcement of RTX Spark Superchip, ASUS unveiled the laptops that will use the said processor.
Computex 2026: ASUS launches ProArt P16, ProArt P14 powered by RTX Spark Superchip
ASUS ProArt P16 and P14

New P-series laptops with advanced AI

These devices were announced at the ongoing Computex 2026, introducing the ProArt P16 and ProArt P14, making them among the first Windows machines to feature Nvidia's new RTX Spark superchip.

Details are still limited at the moment, but here are the confirmed hardware specifications. ASUS says both laptops feature a CNC-milled chassis available in black or a new Neo White finish. 

The P16 is 13% thinner and 16% lighter than its predecessor. Both models are equipped with Asus' Lumina Pro OLED displays with anti-reflective coatings and a peak brightness of 1,600 nits. 
White and black colorways
White and black colorways

The P16 includes a 4K, 120Hz panel with Nvidia G-Sync support, while the P14 uses a 3K display. 

Inside them is the RTX Spark, which integrates a 20-core Nvidia Grace CPU with a Blackwell-architecture RTX GPU, which includes 6,144 CUDA cores and FP4 Tensor Cores. 

The two components are connected via Nvidia's NVLink-C2C interconnect and support up to 128GB of unified memory — an architecture that allows large amounts of RAM to be allocated to the GPU, which is a common requirement for running large language models (LLMs) locally.

ASUS states the new systems are capable of running 120-billion-parameter LLMs with context windows of up to one million tokens. 

The company also claims the hardware supports 12K video editing, rendering of 90GB 3D scenes, and on-device 4K AI video generation.

Additional features include haptic trackpads and 99.9 Wh batteries.

Adobe is also reportedly developing updated versions of Photoshop and Premiere Pro optimized for the RTX Spark architecture. Asus says this is expected to deliver twice the performance for AI and graphics workloads.

What do you guys think?

Source: ASUS

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