This is a story that's been brewing for a while and we've been expecting Nvidia to develop an Arm APU for PCs for quite some time now. However, events have taken an interesting turn, with claims that the chip is being created in collaboration with MediaTek and could be ready for shipping in 2025.
That's according to a report by Taiwan newspaper United Daily News (UDN), in which it states that the overall design has already been finalized, with full completion being achieved by the end of 2024. MediaTek and Nvidia have previously worked on automotive chips and even developed a preliminary reference laptop specification back in 2021.
Nvidia has a long history with Arm, with its Tegra SoC (system-on-chip) range combining Arm Cortex cores and various GPU architectures. Nintendo chose the 2015 Tegra X1 to power its Switch console and is expected to do the same for the handheld's successor, using one of the latest Tegra models or a custom variant.
But why would Nvidia and MediaTek be choosing to enter the PC market now, rather than sticking to other markets? First of all, 2024 has (unofficially) become the year of the AI PC, if one is to believe AMD, Intel, and Microsoft—they're all on board with AI, either in the form of NPU (neural processing units) or generative AI software tools. Nvidia is very much an artificial intelligence company these days, earning billions of dollars every quarter from sales of its H100 mega-chips. So, naturally, it will be wanting a healthy slice of the new AI PC market.
2024 is also (unofficially) the year of Arm chips for PCs. There has long been an exclusivity agreement between Qualcomm and Microsoft around the CPUs for Windows on Arm PCs, and it's been rumoured that will expire in 2024. With that gone it should lead to a host of potential entrants into the PC market, now that x86 isn't the only CPU game in town for the Microsoft OS.
Qualcomm is MediaTek's immediate rival and has already thrown down the AI PC gauntlet itself, in the form of
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