Microsoft and Nvidia reportedly team up on AI PCs that run actual agents instead of Copilot
Nvidia is pushing into the PC market with its own chips as the main processor. The first Windows computers from Dell and Microsoft's Surface line are set to be unveiled next week at Computex and Build. Microsoft is also planning new software likely based on the OpenClaw framework that lets AI agents handle tasks locally on Windows PCs, a second shot after the Copilot+ PC concept largely flopped.
Article intelligence
Key points
- Nvidia enters PC market with its own main processor chips.
- Dell and Microsoft Surface Windows AI PCs to debut next week.
- Microsoft developing OpenClaw-based software for local AI agents.
- This follows the lackluster reception of Copilot+ PCs.
Why it matters
This matters because nvidia enters PC market with its own main processor chips.
Technical impact
May affect agent architecture, tool calling, workflow automation, and product integration.
Nvidia is pushing into the PC market with its own chips as the main processor. The first Windows computers from Dell and Microsoft's Surface line are set to be unveiled next week at Computex and Build. Microsoft is also planning new software likely based on the OpenClaw framework that lets AI agents handle tasks locally on Windows PCs, a second shot after the Copilot+ PC concept largely flopped.
The article Microsoft and Nvidia reportedly team up on AI PCs that run actual agents instead of Copilot appeared first on The Decoder.