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

'The retail SSD market has almost disappeared,' says Silicon Motion exec
By Anton Shilov published
Vice president of client storage solutions at Silicon Motion warns that the retail SSD market has almost disappeared as NAND makers prioritize shipments of memory to AI data centers.

SMI's PCIe 6.0 SSD controller for consumer SSDs coming next year, but severe NAND shortages will get even worse in 2027 as AI data centers swallow supply
By Anton Shilov published
Silicon Motion's Nelson Duann discusses NAND supply crisis in the consumer SSD market and the future of consumer storage.

Intel's one-two punch plan in desktop CPUs is taking shape
By Jake Roach published
Premium Intel’s next-gen desktop plans are starting to take shape, and Computex entertained a lot of murmurs about what’s coming from Team Blue over the next year at the event.

AMD’s massive SP7 socket for EPYC Venice and Intel’s gargantuan 9,324-pin socket for Diamond Rapids appear at Computex
By Anton Shilov published
Premium Next-generation data center processors from AMD and Intel with 16 DDR5 memory channels are even bigger than today’s designs.

Marvell details vision of optically-interconnected data centers spanning across thousands of kilometres
By Anton Shilov published
Premium Marvell shares its vision for optically connected data centers, connecting devices across hundreds of kilometers, and the company already has hardware to build them.

Intel reportedly preparing surprise return to DDR4 systems with 'Raptor Lake Next'
By Jake Roach published
The name came up a few times during our conversations at Computex. Intel has declined to comment on it.

Crushing shortages force Biwin into $1.86 billion NAND deal for SSDs
By Anton Shilov published
Biwin signs a 24-months supply agreement with an unknown NAND maker to get memory worth $1.86 billion.

Levelplay shows off magnetically attached fans that are reversible, connect via pogo pins and USB-C
By Matt Safford published
Levelplay took to Computex with some interesting cooling concepts, like magnetic fans that can be reversed in seconds, and an AIO that puts a big tactile knob for fan control on top of your CPU.
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