Synology leads the charge as Computex 2026 brings AI down to earth

Synology leads the charge as Computex 2026 brings AI down to earth

In the AI gold rush, the quiet custodian of your data may well strike it richest

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Synology leads the charge as Computex 2026 brings AI down to earth

If COMPUTEX 2026 is the world’s grand parade of artificial intelligence (AI), robotics and next‑generation computing, then Synology looks well placed to march out front with the biggest drum.

As Taipei prepares to host the largest COMPUTEX ever, bringing together more than 1,500 companies under the theme “AI Together”, the Taiwanese data‑management firm is shaping up as one of the clearest examples of how the show is no longer just about flashy chips and faster laptops, but about the practical technology that keeps modern digital life from collapsing into panic and password resets.

Nvidia's CEO Jensen Huang meets press on the sideline of Taiwan's annual tech show Computex in Taipei, Taiwan June 2, 2026. (Photo: Reuters)

Nvidia's CEO Jensen Huang meets press on the sideline of Taiwan's annual tech show Computex in Taipei, Taiwan June 2, 2026. (Photo: Reuters)

That matters because COMPUTEX, founded in 1981, has long been one of the best places to understand why Taiwan matters so much to the global technology business. Organisers describe it as a leading global exhibition for ICT, IoT and increasingly AI‑led innovation, with products spanning the full chain from core components to finished solutions. In plain English, it is where the future shows up early, slightly overdressed and desperate to impress.

This year's exhibition showed that AI is no longer content to sit in distant data centres and sound expensive. This year’s biggest highlight was AI coming down to earth — onto laptops, into robots and closer to everyday life. Tech organisers framed the event around AI and computing, robotics and mobility and next‑generation technology, while show coverage pointed to new devices and systems designed to put AI directly in people’s hands.

Some of the most notable announcements focused on what can run on the device itself, promising better speed, privacy and resilience when the internet behaves like a moody monsoon. VentureBeat reported that Perplexity AI unveiled a hybrid local‑cloud system at the show that decides which tasks stay on a user’s machine and which go to the cloud, underscoring a broader industry push towards practical, on‑device AI rather than pure theatre.

A robot arm powered by a Gigabyte server delivers tasks during the annual Computex trade show in Taipei, Taiwan, June 3, 2026. (Photo: Reuters)

A robot arm powered by a Gigabyte server delivers tasks during the annual Computex trade show in Taipei, Taiwan, June 3, 2026. (Photo: Reuters)

The hardware fireworks were still bright enough to make any gadget‑lover grin. Nvidia’s new RTX Spark chips, Intel’s Arc G3 Extreme push for handheld gaming and a wave of striking display technology, while the official show message cast Taiwan as a hub for AI that now stretches from servers to smart mobility and robotics. In short, COMPUTEX was not merely flexing silicon. It was trying to prove AI can earn its keep before it runs your cash low.

In 2026, however, the clever money may be on Synology. While many exhibitors are expected to arrive with the usual COMPUTEX formula — more AI, more screens, more claims that your refrigerator now has “workflow potential” — Synology’s preview for COMPUTEX 2026 points to something broader and more grounded: the next version of DSM, plus advances in back‑up, business productivity, AI and video surveillance. That is not just a product list. It is a quiet argument that the real winners of the AI age may not be the loudest machines on the floor, but the firms that help people manage, protect and actually use their data.

Atmosphere at COMPUTEX 2026. (Photos: Komsan Jandamit)

Atmosphere at COMPUTEX 2026. (Photos: Komsan Jandamit)

Synology has been building up to this moment. Official COMPUTEX 2025 material listed the company among featured exhibitors, while Synology’s own event page said it would showcase innovations across enterprise storage, data protection, surveillance, AI‑powered productivity, personal private cloud and its 25 Series NAS line. In other words, it was not turning up with one shiny gadget and a hopeful smile. It was arriving with an ecosystem.

And that ecosystem was hardly modest. Synology’s official 2025 press material highlighted the PAS7700 enterprise storage system, the DP7200 backup appliance, C2 Surveillance, ChatPlus, Synology Meet and BeeStation Plus. Taken together, those products reach from large companies protecting critical information to households and small offices trying to keep photos, files, calls and cameras in one manageable place. It is a far cry from the old image of a network-attached storage box humming quietly in the corner like an obedient office kettle.

That is also why Synology fits the new COMPUTEX better than many readers might expect. Over the last decade, the exhibition has shifted from being mainly a showcase for PCs, gaming machines and components into a wider platform for start-ups, AI, connectivity and integrated solutions. A major turning point came in 2016 with the launch of InnoVEX, the start-up section that drew more than 200 start-ups and 10,000 attendees in its first year. Since then, the show has steadily evolved into a place where the most interesting companies are often the ones solving daily business problems, not merely producing louder hardware.

SK Group Chairman Chey Tae-won answers questions from members of the media at the SK Hynix booth during the annual Computex exhibition in Taipei, Taiwan, June 2, 2026. (Photo: Reuters)

SK Group Chairman Chey Tae-won answers questions from members of the media at the SK Hynix booth during the annual Computex exhibition in Taipei, Taiwan, June 2, 2026. (Photo: Reuters)

COMPUTEX 2026 suggests AI is no longer merely software in the cloud, but something increasingly physical and woven into daily life through robots, smart devices, storage, infrastructure and workplace systems. The official forum agenda reinforces that shift with sessions on physical AI, industrial and edge robotics, personal AI devices, and AI‑driven work and decision‑making, while Qualcomm’s own COMPUTEX material brands this moment “The Year of Agents”.

The wider show certainly still provides spectacle. In recent years, COMPUTEX has been dominated by AI servers, AI PCs, robotics, future mobility and edge devices, with 2025 officially framed around “AI NEXT” and 2026 around “AI Together”. But for readers outside the technology bubble, Synology may be the more useful face of the event because its products are easier to grasp in ordinary life: safer back‑ups, smarter surveillance, easier collaboration, private cloud storage and tools that promise to keep your digital household in order. Not sexy, perhaps — but neither is an umbrella until the rain begins.

There is also a neat bit of symbolism here. COMPUTEX has always reflected Taiwan’s place in the global supply chain, from the age of motherboards and notebooks to today’s AI infrastructure race. Synology, a home‑grown company focused on managing and protecting data, represents a slightly different and arguably more mature chapter of that story. Taiwan is no longer just helping the world build machines; it is helping the world make those machines useful, secure and survivable after the ransomware email arrives on a sleepy Monday morning.

PAS7700 enterprise storage system

PAS7700 enterprise storage system

Rahat Boontanjin, Synology Country Manager of Thailand showing the media around Synology booth.

Rahat Boontanjin, Synology Country Manager of Thailand showing the media around Synology booth.

So yes, this year's event is packed with the usual giant names, futuristic promises and enough buzzwords to power a small district of Bangkok. But if one company looks poised to steal the show in a way ordinary readers can actually appreciate, Synology makes a strong case. In a year when everyone is shouting about AI, it is the firm talking about storage, protection, surveillance and productivity that may end up sounding the most intelligent of all.

The standout message from COMPUTEX 2026 was not just that machines are getting faster, but that AI is trying very hard to become useful, visible and perhaps even house‑trained. If the industry gets its way, the next big computing upgrade in Thailand may arrive not with a bang, but with a very polite robot and a laptop that quietly does the hard work while you claim the credit.

COMPUTEX 2026 took place at Taipei Nangang Exhibition Centre between June 2 and 6. The event was organised by Taiwan External Trade Development Council and Taipei Computer Association.

Visitors observe Pegatron’s robot dog during the annual Computex trade show in Taipei, Taiwan, June 2, 2026. (Photo: Reuters)

Visitors observe Pegatron’s robot dog during the annual Computex trade show in Taipei, Taiwan, June 2, 2026. (Photo: Reuters)


Synology rolls out AI‑powered data push at Computex 2026

Synology has unveiled a new suite of artificial intelligence‑driven data solutions at Computex 2026 in Taipei, aiming to strengthen security, improve efficiency and give businesses tighter control over their data — with the quiet suggestion that your files may soon be working harder than you are.

Synology Chief executive Philip Wong

Synology Chief executive Philip Wong

Chief executive Philip Wong said data remains central to the company’s vision, with trust, ownership and privacy at the forefront. The goal, he noted, is to ensure organisations and home users can manage sensitive information confidently, without it wandering off into places it should not.

At the heart of the launch is the upgraded DiskStation Manager (DSM), now designed to be both AI‑ready and enterprise‑ready. It supports GPU‑powered NAS systems for AI workloads, while new automation tools and a centralised cluster manager aim to simplify administration, which is a move likely to please IT teams who would rather not juggle dashboards like street performers.

DP5200

DP5200

Synology also strengthened its cyber resilience offering with ActiveProtect Manager 2.0 and the DP5200 appliance, extending support across hybrid cloud platforms including AWS and Azure. With AI detecting unusual activity and enabling cross‑platform recovery, the system is built to keep operations running smoothly — even when cyber threats inevitably try their luck.

Beyond infrastructure, the company expanded its collaboration tools and personal cloud range. New workplace apps offer AI‑powered transcription and translation under strict on‑premises security, while the Bee Series targets consumers with private storage and smart search. In short, whether running a business or just hunting for old holiday photos, Synology is betting a bit of AI can save both time and the occasional headache.

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