Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang used his keynote this week to pitch a radical vision for the future of personal computing — one where laptops are rebuilt from the ground up to run AI models locally. Speaking during developer conference season, Huang outlined a new class of AI-native devices that go far beyond today's "AI PC" marketing, prompting the hosts of The Vergecast to ask the obvious question: does anyone actually want this? On the latest episode, David Pierce and Nilay Patel walked through the flood of AI announcements from Microsoft Build and Google I/O, including Google's Gemini Spark, Nvidia's RTX Spark, and Microsoft's secretive Scout and Solara projects, all of which lean heavily on AI agents that promise to handle tasks autonomously. The conversation also turned to Apple's rumored smart glasses and the broader question of whether laptops need a complete rethink just to handle on-device AI, or whether existing hardware with smarter software is sufficient. Pierce and Patel weren't convinced that consumers are clamoring for AI-first computers, noting that the gap between Big Tech's relentless AI enthusiasm and actual user demand remains wide. They also touched on the regulatory beat, mocking FCC Chair Brendan Carr, shared thoughts heading into WWDC, and laughed through a particularly silly Meta hack that made the rounds this week. The episode marked one week into The Vergecast's new daily format, a significant shift from the show's traditional three-episodes-per-week schedule. Pierce said the team has already covered Nvidia's chip ambitions, the "Steroid Olympics," and Microsoft's developer conference, and is actively soliciting listener feedback to refine the new approach. Listeners can reach the show by calling 866-VERGE11 or emailing vergecast@theverge.com, with the hosts promising to use the input to shape the podcast's evolution as it settles into its daily rhythm.