Microsoft just announced the Surface Laptop Ultra, and if you’ve been following our coverage of the NVIDIA RTX Spark chip, you already know the kind of firepower we’re talking about here.

The Surface Laptop Ultra is the most powerful laptop Microsoft has ever built. It pairs NVIDIA’s Blackwell RTX GPU with up to 128GB of unified memory, full CUDA support, and 1 petaflop of AI compute.

As we covered when RTX Spark launched, that is enough to run 120-billion-parameter AI models entirely on the device, without sending a single byte to the cloud.

The unified memory is worth paying attention to. Instead of splitting RAM between your CPU and GPU, the system dynamically allocates it wherever your workload needs it most. That means AI creation, 3D rendering, and multi-model workflows can all run simultaneously without stepping on each other.

Apple MacBooks have been benefiting from this unified architecture for years, and finally, Windows users will be able to enjoy it too. 

Who is this laptop for?

Microsoft is clearly positioning this laptop for developers, creators, and AI builders who push their machines to the limit. Think massive 3D scenes, long compile cycles, and local models that would bring regular laptops to a crawling halt.

Other features of the laptop include a 15-inch mini-LED PixelSense Ultra display that goes up to 2,000 nits of peak HDR brightness at 262 pixels per inch, which is the brightest display Microsoft has ever shipped. 

The haptic touchpad is also the largest ever on a Surface, and the port selection covers HDMI, USB-C, USB-A, SD card, and a headphone jack, so no hunting for dongles. 

What about battery life?

Microsoft says the Surface Laptop Ultra offers all-day battery life, which is impressive given the raw power inside. The ultra-efficient CPU architecture is doing a lot of work here to keep things running without draining the battery in an hour.

The laptop comes in Platinum and Nightfall finishes and will be available later this year. Pricing has not been announced yet. But seeing how Microsoft has significantly raised the prices of its existing Surface laptops, expect these laptops to burn a serious hole in your wallet.

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