MSI Gears Up for Computex 2025 with Groundbreaking Tech
MSI is gearing up for Computex 2025, and what they have in store is truly something special. Imagine a supercomputer, but instead of filling a room, it fills your desktop. That's what MSI's new EdgeXpert MS-C931 promises.
The EdgeXpert MS-C931: Mini Titan with NVIDIA Brawn
This is not your typical desktop. The EdgeXpert MS-C931 is built on NVIDIA's DGX Spark platform, and the name alone tells you that it's not playing around. Under the hood, it should have the monster NVIDIA GB100 chip, which offers up to 1000 TOPS in AI performance (that's trillions of operations per second, for those keeping score). The chip will be tightly coupled with a Grace CPU via NVIDIA's NVLink-C2C technology, with the result being very, very fast communication between components.
What do you do with all that power. MSI says it will handle ginormous language models with 200 billion parameters (or even 405 billion if you string two of these little brutes together). It will also come with NVIDIA software pre-installed, ready to run popular language models like DeepSeek natively on your local machine. To support these demanding tasks, the system will offer up to 128 GB of total memory and support a maximum of 4 TB of high-speed NVMe SSD storage.
More Than Just a Supercomputer: MSI's Computex Lineup
While EdgeXpert MS-C931 is definitely a show-stopper, MSI has a few more tricks up its sleeve for Computex. They are also launching a line of new industrial motherboards and workstations, based on the latest from Intel, including Bartlett Lake, Twin Lake, Raptor Lake Refresh, and Arrow Lake processors. Here's a sneak peek at some additional breakthroughs:
- MS-C926: An extremely low-profile PC designed with passive cooling, perfect for digital signage and other retail deployments where silence and small size are a priority.
- MS-927: A very small PC with Intel Core Ultra processors, designed to deliver "high-performance advanced computing" in a very small package.
- MS-CF20: An ATX motherboard designed to handle the new Intel Arrow Lake-S processors, shaping the future of desktop build.
We're still awaiting the full specs and prices on these new gadgets and components, but MSI is certainly building some buzz for Computex 2025. They seem to be pushing to get some serious power into smaller form factors, and that's always a good thing.