Computex 2026
Computex, the most important show for computer hardware, runs from June 2 to June 5 in Taipei, with related announcements likely starting a couple of days earlier.
The tech world's biggest computing players — Nvidia, Intel, AMD, and Qualcomm, among others — are all participating in this year's show, along with PC OEMs like Asus, MSI, and Acer, and component vendors like Cooler Master and Lian Li. We'll be covering all AI Computing and Next-Gen announcements here, and we'll have editors on the ground going hands-on with the new products.
Latest about Computex

AMD is reportedly developing an entry-level RDNA 4 GPU, the RX 9050, with 8GB of VRAM
By Aaron Klotz published
AMD is allegedly planning to launch an RX 9050 SKU to compete with the RTX 5050, featuring more cores than the OEM-exclusive RX 9060.

Nvidia's long-rumored N1 SoC spotted on a laptop motherboard with 128 GB RAM, listed for $1,400
By Hassam Nasir published
The N1/N1X chips are finally right around the corner.

Zalman's jet engine-inspired CPU cooler hits the shelves
By Mark Tyson published
Korean cases and cooling specialist Zalman Technologies has released the jet-engine inspired Zet5 CPU cooler to retail.

CAMM2 and modules smile to the camera, but do not expect them on the market soon
By Anton Shilov published
If ever.

TeamGroup's curious PCIe 5.0 SSD strategy: Adopt controllers from all makers
By Anton Shilov published
TeamGroup has expanded its high-end PCIe 5.0 SSD lineup to six different families based on four controller vendors to cover a wide range of performance and price points.

Molex demonstrates PCIe 7.0 cabling solution: 128 GT/s at 1 meter
By Anton Shilov published
Molex unveiled its Genesis connector and cable system at Computex, targeting future PCIe 7.0 deployments with a design optimized for 128 GT/s signaling.

Realtek eyes SSDs with new PCIe 5.0 x4 DRAM-less controller — Up to 10 GB/s and 1.4M IOPS
By Anton Shilov published
Realtek is attempting to enter the SSD controller market with its RTS5781DL, a PCIe 5.0 DRAM-less controller that is now sampling. But can it compete with established players?

Lian Li’s tube-hiding Hydroshift II LCD-C AIO cooler adds a rotating dial for software-free display and RGB control
By Kunal Khullar published
It also comes with improved tubing, thinner design, and wireless fan options
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