Microsoft Surface Laptop Ultra: the premium laptop that wants to shake up the industry
The Surface Laptop Ultra is not just a laptop; It is Microsoft's most ambitious bet to demonstrate that its hardware can play in the major leagues
Microsoft has just given one of the most ambitious announcements in its recent hardware history. The Surface Laptop Ultra is not a simple catalog update; It is a declaration of intent. Redmond wants to demonstrate that Windows on ARM can compete head-to-head with the most powerful machines on the market, and it does so with a chip that changes the rules of the game: the NVIDIA RTX Spark.
Although Microsoft has already launched new Surface Laptop models with Intel Core Ultra Series 3 aimed at businesses, it is the Surface Laptop Ultra that monopolizes all the media attention for its absolutely extraordinary specifications.
A chip that changes everything: NVIDIA RTX Spark in action
The heart of this team is the NVIDIA RTX Spark platform, a superchip that combines an ARM architecture CPU and an NVIDIA Blackwell RTX GPU with up to 6,144 cores. The beast can accommodate up to 128 GB of unified memory, which means that the CPU and GPU share the same memory space to distribute tasks intelligently and without bottlenecks.
The numerical result is impressive: 1 petaflop of AI computing power, enough to locally run language models with up to 120 billion parameters. To put it into perspective, that's the kind of muscle you previously only found on desktop workstations or servers. Microsoft has also optimized Windows 11's task scheduler and its Power and Thermal Framework so that the system distributes workloads between CPU and GPU without wasting energy.
And all that power comes with full support for CUDA, NVIDIA's development ecosystem that has been indispensable for years for those working with AI, 3D rendering, or professional creative flows. Tools like Blender, DaVinci Resolve, Premiere, Photoshop, CapCut or Cinema4D already have or are in the process of having native ARM support to make the most of it.
A design that takes care of every detail and does not skimp on the screen
Forgetting the minimalist trend of the Surface of previous generations, the Ultra comes with everything. The 15-inch PixelSense Ultra mini-LED panel reaches a peak brightness of 2,000 nits with HDR, making it the brightest display Microsoft has ever put on a Surface laptop. With a density of 262 pixels per inch and a 16:10 aspect ratio, the workspace is large, sharp and designed for creators.
The haptic touchpad is the largest seen in the history of the Surface family, and the chassis, made of polished aluminum less than 18 mm thick and less than 2 kg in weight, will be available in Platinum and Nightfall finishes. Elegant, light and premium without sacrificing substance.
In the connectivity section, Microsoft finally listened to the criticism that had accumulated for years. The Surface Laptop Ultra comes with HDMI, USB-C, USB-A, SD card reader and audio jack, all natively, without adapters. Added to this is a cooling system that offers up to 2.5 times more thermal capacity than the seventh generation Surface Laptop 15, so that performance does not drop during long and intense sessions.
Another point that deserves applause is repairability: the SSD is user-replaceable with standard tools, and the equipment includes internal guides for technical interventions, something that the Surface range has rarely offered before.
Price and availability: when and how much will it cost?
Here comes the part that requires a little patience. Microsoft has confirmed that the Surface Laptop Ultra is scheduled for commercial launch at the end of 2026, although the company itself clarifies in the fine print that it is a preliminary product and that its final characteristics may change, also subject to regulatory certifications depending on the country or region.
As for the price, there are no official figures yet. What can be anticipated with enough certainty is that it will not be an affordable device. Taking into account the latest generation components, the close collaboration with NVIDIA and the direct positioning against Apple's most powerful MacBook Pros, the Surface Laptop Ultra clearly aims for the high premium segment. Some industry leaks even suggest that large-scale distribution could extend well into 2027, depending on the availability of the RTX Spark chip on an industrial scale.
What is clear is that Microsoft has drawn a very specific line with this launch: it wants the Surface Laptop Ultra to be the definitive demonstration that Windows on ARM is no longer an experiment, but a platform capable of facing the best on the market without apologies. Local AI, heavy-duty rendering, and more demanding creative workflows now have a serious answer from Redmond's side.
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