Delivering a total AI factory solution from blueprint to deployment, accelerating token generation and enterprise AI adoption
TAIPEI, June 2, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- ASUS today announced its latest AI infrastructure solutions showcase at Computex 2026, delivering end-to-end AI factory capabilities in collaboration with ecosystem leaders including NVIDIA, Intel® and AMD. Spanning rack-scale AI factories and POD architectures to ultrafast content memory storage solutions and enterprise-ready agentic AI applications, ASUS provides enterprise with a complete foundation for the entire AI lifecycle — from infrastructure design and deployment to large-scale token generation, inference, and real-world business adoption.

By providing flexible, tightly integrated solutions across compute, storage, networking, and software, ASUS empowers enterprises to build, deploy, and optimize high-performance AI infrastructure at scale —significantly accelerating time to market while maximizing operational efficiency, cost-effectiveness, and strategic agility in an increasingly AI-driven competitive landscape.
Accelerating token generation with NVIDIA DSX
ASUS is at the forefront of AI infrastructure with the XA VR721-E3, ASUS AI POD built on NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72, a 100% liquid-cooled rack-scale platform purpose-built for trillion-parameter models and next-generation AI factories. To facilitate the deployment of these advanced AI capabilities and leverage the NVIDIA DSX platform for token generation, ASUS assists customers to simulate the AI factory blueprints into deployment-ready infrastructure. By integrating ASUS rack-scale AI systems with NVIDIA DSX customers can comprehensively evaluate critical deployment factors — including power delivery, cooling design, networking topology, storage integration, and facility readiness — before physical buildout commences. This is further enhanced through OpenUSD-based digital-twin workflows, where ASUS and ecosystem partner solutions are represented as simulation-ready assets, enabling customers to accurately anticipate infrastructure requirements and optimize deployment plans in advance.
Addressing rigorous AI workload demands, ASUS will also showcase systems accelerated by NVIDIA HGX Rubin NVL8 and Intel® Xeon® 6 processor, including XA NR1I-E12L, an innovative hybrid-cooled option, and XA NR1I-E12LR, a 100% liquid-cooled system. The lineup also includes XA NB3I-E12, featuring NVIDIA HGX B300, delivering high-performance acceleration for training, inference and simulation. The portfolio is further strengthened by a comprehensive lineup of high-performance, scalable NVIDIA MGX servers. Making their debut are XA P8A-E14AXL, a high-density 6U system supporting eight liquid-cooled NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition GPUs; and XA P4N-E2, a 2U AI server powered by NVIDIA Vera C2 processors for next-generation agentic AI systems. ASUS will also showcase its ESC8000 series, including ESC8000-E12P and ESC8000A-E13P, supporting NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell and RTX PRO 4500 Blackwell Server Edition GPUs for demanding AI, data processing, video and visual computing workloads, as well as ESC8000A-E13X, integrated with NVIDIA ConnectX-8 SuperNICs for extreme GPU-to-GPU connectivity.
For broader enterprise and general-purpose applications, ASUS presents the latest RS700A/RS720A/RS500A/RS520A series servers featuring 6th generation AMD EPYC CPU. Together, these platforms ensure flexible infrastructure options across AI, HPC, virtualization and data-driven workloads, reinforcing the ability of ASUS to support customers from large-scale AI factories to everyday enterprise computing.
Strengthening context memory and storage for scalable inference
As AI workloads evolve toward long-context, multi-turn and agentic workflows, inference context has become a major infrastructure bottleneck. ASUS addresses this with the new CMX™ storage server, UF920-E3-RS24, powered by NVIDIA Vera CPU with NVIDIA BlueField-4 DPU and NVIDIA ConnectX-9 SuperNIC. This platform delivers high-performance KV cache access to accelerate token generation for training, inference and enterprise-scale AI deployments. In collaboration with WEKA and IBM, it offers advanced data management, intelligent services and high-speed storage access, optimizing AI data pipelines and maximizing GPU utilization and overall compute efficiency. This reinforces ASUS as a total AI infrastructure solution provider, delivering integrated compute, storage, networking, and software integration to power enterprise AI at scale.
Enabling token consumption across enterprise and vertical AI adoption
For token consumption, ASUS demonstrates how its total AI infrastructure — built on scalable NVIDIA MGX architecture, NVIDIA RTX PRO Servers, NVIDIA Jetson edge computers and enterprise-ready software — can serve as the foundation for diverse AI adoption across enterprises, SMBs, traditional industries and healthcare. Working with industry innovators and ecosystem partners, ASUS enables customers to turn AI infrastructure into practical, vertical-ready workflows, including:
In addition, ASUS collaborates with ecosystem partners such as Dobby DeepAgent Platform and NunoX to expand agentic AI and industry-specific AI adoption across SMB operations and traditional industries. ASUS is taking the NVIDIA supported Yocto project on NVIDIA Jetson to enable customers to customize Linux OS safely and securely. Together, these demonstrations show how ASUS helps customers move from infrastructure readiness to enterprise AI adoption, turning AI factory capabilities into practical value across vertical industries.
Strengthening AI factory operations and long-term scalability
ASUS demonstrates a complete AI infrastructure strategy that spans design, simulate, deployment, operations, management and vertical AI enablement. Empowered by ASUS total infrastructure solutions — from servers and storage to software and professional services — customers can accelerate infrastructure bring-up while addressing the most critical priorities in AI data centers: power efficiency, cooling readiness, system reliability, deployment risk and total cost of ownership. By combining rack-scale AI compute, storage, software services, ASUS helps customers optimize infrastructure from planning to deployment, improve PUE, lower TCO and build scalable AI factories ready to support diverse workloads from data center to edge.
AVAILABILITY & PRICING
ASUS servers are available worldwide. However, the availability of some ASUS products may be subject to local regulatory requirements. For specific product availability and offerings in your region, please contact your local ASUS representative.
Photo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/2992864/image.jpg
View original content:https://www.prnewswire.co.uk/news-releases/asus-adopts-nvidia-dsx-ai-factory-platform-to-accelerate-time-to-first-revenue-302787995.html
Der Halbleiter- und Lichtkonzern ams-Osram stellt sein Geschäftsportfolio neu auf und setzt dabei verstärkt auf Wachstumsmärkte wie Komponenten für Augmented-Reality-Brillen und intelligente Lichttechnologien. Vorstandschef Aldo Kamper bezeichnete den Verkauf der nicht optischen Sensorsparte an Infineon als wichtigen Schritt, um das Unternehmen „für die Zukunft aufzustellen“. Die Transaktion soll dem Konzern 570 Millionen Euro einbringen und nach aktueller Planung zum 1. Juli abgeschlossen werden.
Mit dem Verkauf trennt sich ams-Osram von einem Geschäftsbereich, der rund sieben Prozent zum Konzernumsatz beigesteuert hat, reduziert im Gegenzug aber die eigene Verschuldung deutlich. Laut Kamper kann die Schuldenlast um etwa ein Drittel gedrückt werden, die jährlichen Zinszahlungen sollen in den kommenden Jahren von rund 300 Millionen Euro auf etwa die Hälfte sinken. Der so gewonnene finanzielle Spielraum soll in den Ausbau bestehender Geschäftsfelder und in neue Produkte fließen.
Im Zentrum der Wachstumsstrategie stehen Komponenten für Augmented-Reality-Brillen. Bereits heute liefert ams-Osram Sensorelemente an Hersteller solcher Systeme, wenn auch in nach Kamps Worten noch „überschaubarem“ Ausmaß. Mittelfristig rechnet der CEO mit einem stark wachsenden Markt: Anfang der 2030er-Jahre hält er weltweit jährlich 50 bis 100 Millionen verkaufte AR-Brillen für denkbar, ab der Mitte des Jahrzehnts möglicherweise mehr. AR-Brillen sollen reale Umgebungen erweitern, Navigationsinformationen einblenden, Gesichtserkennung ermöglichen oder Vitalparameter überwachen; Nutzungsszenarien sieht Kamper in großer Bandbreite.
Parallel dazu baut ams-Osram digitale Photonik- und LED-Lösungen aus, etwa hochauflösende und „intelligente“ Scheinwerfer, die bereits im Automotive-Bereich im Einsatz sind. Dieses Geschäft bringt derzeit Erlöse im zweistelligen Millionenbereich ein, bis 2028 peilt das Management einen Umsatz von mehr als 100 Millionen Euro an. Weitere Zukunftschancen sieht der Konzern in Lasersystemen für den Rüstungssektor, wo ebenfalls mit zusätzlichem Wachstum gerechnet wird.
Für den Hauptstandort Premstätten in der Steiermark erwartet das Unternehmen trotz der Portfoliobereinigung keine einschneidenden Einschnitte. Nach Abschluss der Infineon-Transaktion sollen 70 Beschäftigte aus der Entwicklung an den Grazer Infineon-Standort wechseln, während Infineon vorerst weiterhin aus dem Werk in Premstätten beliefert wird. ams-Osram bleibt damit auf absehbare Zeit als Auftragsfertiger aktiv. Die Mitarbeiterzahl am Standort soll von derzeit etwa 1.450 bis 2030 auf 1.550 steigen, gestützt von Förderzusagen der Republik Österreich von bis zu 227 Millionen Euro, unter anderem aus dem EU Chips Act.