Site icon TechloMedia

ASUS Unveils ProArt P16, ProArt P14, and ProArt Mini PC With NVIDIA RTX Spark

Asus ProArt NVIDIA RTX Spark

ASUS has introduced a new generation of ProArt devices at Computex 2026. The company announced the ProArt P16, ProArt P14, and ProArt Mini PC, making them among the first systems powered by NVIDIA’s newly announced RTX Spark platform.

The new ProArt lineup is built around NVIDIA’s RTX Spark superchip, which combines a 20-core NVIDIA Grace CPU and a Blackwell-based RTX GPU connected via NVLink-C2C. The platform uses a unified memory architecture and supports up to 128GB of memory.

ASUS says RTX Spark can deliver up to 1 petaflop of AI performance. NVIDIA claims the platform can run AI models with up to 120 billion parameters locally while also handling demanding workloads such as AI video generation and large-scale 3D rendering.

The company has also redesigned the ProArt P16 and ProArt P14. ASUS says the new chassis is 13% thinner and 16% lighter than the previous generation while still accommodating batteries of up to 99.9Wh.

Display quality remains one of the highlights of the ProArt lineup. The ProArt P16 features a 4K OLED display with a 120Hz refresh rate, NVIDIA G-Sync support, and up to 1,600 nits peak brightness. The ProArt P14 offers up to a 3K OLED display.

Both laptops use ASUS Lumina Pro OLED panels and offer Delta E < 1 color accuracy. The laptops will be available in Nano Black and Neo White finishes. ASUS has also added an anti-smudge coating and haptic touchpads.

ASUS also announced the ProArt Mini PC, a compact desktop powered by the same RTX Spark platform. The system supports up to 128GB of unified memory and delivers up to 1 petaflop of AI performance.

Despite measuring just 150 × 150 × 51 mm, the Mini PC features a cooling system capable of handling up to 140W of thermal load. Connectivity options include 10GbE networking, M.2 PCIe Gen 5 x4 support, and high-speed storage expansion.

ASUS has not yet announced pricing for the new ProArt lineup. The devices are expected to launch later this year.

Exit mobile version