Table analysing the proposed measures in the Draghi Report for the digitalisation subsector: computing and AI. It is based on seven variabes distributed in columns. The first three are ranking variables where each measure is awarded a score relative to the other measures in its sector or subsector in a hierarchical way: urgency in the EU, importance of the measure for the EU and importance of the measure for Spain. The remaining four variables classify the proposals on the basis of a three-point scale that depends on the assessment of the proposed measure itself: presence in the Mission Letters (explicit reference, ambiguous or no mention at all), political viability for the EU and for Spain (high, medium or low), and level of public investment needed to put the measure in practice (high-susbtantial, medium-little or none-nothing). 71% (five) of the computing and AI proposals are explicitly or ambiguously mentioned in the Mission Letters sent out to the new European Commission, suggesting abundant political will in the College to put them into practice. The creation of an EU-wide policy and residency requirements for public administrations’ cloud services represents a Political Win. All the measures with high viability at the European level are Quick Wins in computing and AI. Despite the major advances that are needed in this subsector, 57% (four) of its measures do not call for any investment (compared with 14% requiring low and 29% requiring high investment).