Computex memory and AI hardware: what this new wave means
Computex memory and AI hardware trends describe a new generation of DDR5 overclocking RAM, ultra-fast SSDs, and integrated workstation platforms that combine high bandwidth, high capacity, and smart monitoring features to serve both gaming enthusiasts and AI professionals in a single, upgradeable desktop ecosystem. At this year’s event, Biwin and V Color give a clear view of where this market is heading. Biwin’s storage portfolio showcase highlights how PCIe Gen5 SSDs and rugged portable drives are pushing sequential speeds into the tens of gigabytes per second. V Color, meanwhile, is transforming from a memory supplier into an AI computing platform integrator, pairing OLED-equipped gaming memory hardware with full Windows-based AI workstation solutions. Together, their Computex 2026 memory announcements show that storage and RAM are no longer passive components but active, visible parts of performance tuning and AI workflow design.

Biwin’s storage portfolio showcase: from DDR5 kits to pocket-sized SSDs
Biwin’s Computex 2026 memory and storage portfolio covers desktop, mobile, and pro media workflows in one booth. The headline DRAM product is the Black Opal OC Lab Gold Edition DW100 RGB kit, a 192GB configuration with four 48GB modules running at DDR5-6000 CL28, aimed squarely at demanding overclockers and AMD Ryzen platforms. On the SSD side, the Black Opal X570 PRO PCIe Gen5 SSD supports PCIe 5.0 x4 and reaches up to 14,000MB/s sequential read and 13,000MB/s write, backed by a 6nm controller and up to 8GB of DRAM cache for high IOPS workloads. For creators who move large datasets, Biwin’s Amber PX4000 Portable SSD delivers up to 3,900MB/s reads in an IP67-rated shell with up to 8TB capacity that works across Windows, macOS, mobile devices, and consoles.

Portable media performance: CFexpress, microSD Express, and mini SSD innovation
Beyond desktop PC builds, Biwin’s Computex 2026 memory lineup extends to cameras, handhelds, and field workstations. The Amber CB500 CFexpress 4.0 Type B card is pitched at 8K and 12K RAW pipelines, with read speeds up to 3,750MB/s and writes up to 3,500MB/s, and is claimed to be the first CFexpress Type B card to achieve VPG800 certification for sustained 800MB/s recording. For smaller devices, the Amber ME300 microSD Express card brings PCIe NVMe architecture into a micro-sized form factor, hitting up to 900MB/s read and 800MB/s write with capacities up to 1TB and backward compatibility for UHS-I slots. Biwin is also shrinking NVMe drives with the CL100 Mini SSD, a PCIe 4.0 x2 device barely larger than a microSD card yet rated up to 3,700MB/s read. Paired with the RD510 USB4 reader and active cooling, it turns pocket storage into a high-speed extension of PCs and handheld consoles.

V Color’s OLED gaming memory and DDR5 overclocking RAM
V Color’s Computex stand puts gaming memory hardware in the spotlight by embedding smart OLED displays directly on DDR5 overclocking RAM modules. These OLED sticks move beyond RGB effects to show real-time metrics such as total capacity, platform information, frequency, voltage, and live temperatures. The display can change states when specific temperature thresholds are crossed, giving overclockers immediate feedback without relying solely on software overlays. V Color worked with motherboard vendors so the OLED panels can sync with BIOS profiles, showing active Intel XMP or AMD EXPO settings while the system is under load. To keep builds visually balanced, the company also patented an RGB dummy module that fills empty DIMM slots for a consistent lighting layout. On the production side, fifth-generation high-frequency IC sorting equipment allows V Color to test chips under high temperatures and extreme frequencies to maintain strong yields for its fastest kits.

Windows-based AI workstation solutions enter the mainstream
V Color is using its memory expertise as a springboard into complete AI workstation solutions. The company now offers AI-focused RAM configurations from 16GB up to 256GB aimed at high-end platforms such as NVIDIA H200 and B200 accelerators, aligning with the rise of local mini AI servers. According to General Manager He Tianshun, new AI workstations “provide high performance while drastically reducing the high noise levels and heavy energy consumption associated with older AI setups,” which makes them attractive to content creators, video editors, and high-frequency traders who want powerful yet office-friendly systems. As chipmakers open workstation hardware to wider distribution, AI processing is shifting from Linux-only data centers toward personal, Windows-based AI workstations that can train models or render scenes overnight. V Color’s strategy centers on branding and proprietary technology, aiming to integrate memory, OLED monitoring, and AI server design into cohesive platforms rather than stand-alone parts.
