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Computex 2025 live: all the latest from the world's largest computing show in Taipei

We're on the ground covering all the latest news out of Computex 2025

The world's biggest computing tech show, Computex 2025, has now begun - and once again we are on the ground in Taipei, Taiwan to bring you all the latest news, reviews and opinions on all the coolest gadgets, laptops, components, and more.

Some of the biggest names in computing, including Nvidia, AMD and Qualcomm, have already held their keynote presentations - and in this live blog we'll be reporting direct from the event, so you'll get the very latest updates on what the future holds for laptops, PCs, networking and much more.

Phison aiDAPTIV+: When you're training an LLM, the privacy of your data is of the utmost importance. Phison's innovative aiDAPTIV+ lets you do LLM training on-premises without the massive expense of relying on rows and rows of GPU memory. With a focus on high-capacity flash memory, LLMs can be trained safely and affordably in the home, office or classroom.
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Phison aiDAPTIV+: When you're training an LLM, the privacy of your data is of the utmost importance. Phison's innovative aiDAPTIV+ lets you do LLM training on-premises without the massive expense of relying on rows and rows of GPU memory. With a focus on high-capacity flash memory, LLMs can be trained safely and affordably in the home, office or classroom.

AMD Press Conference Livestream

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Matt Hanson reporting in! I've arrived in Taipei and ready to see what Computex 2025 has in store.

Image of Computex show floor with 'TechRadar Computex 2025' logo

(Image credit: Computex / Future)

Acer at Computex

(Image credit: Future)

Acer Swift X 14

(Image credit: Future)

Acer Swift X 14

(Image credit: Future)

Acer Swift X 14

(Image credit: Future)

Acer Swift laptop

(Image credit: Future)

Acer Swift X 14

(Image credit: Future)

Acer Swift laptop

(Image credit: Future)

Right, going to move on from the Swift laptops for a while and take a look at Acer's Predator lineup of gaming laptops.

Look at these beauties. We have the Nitro 18 AI (notice a trend?), which comes with up to an AMD Ryzen AI 9 365 processor, up to an Nvidia GeForce RTX 5070Ti GPU, and 2560 x 1600 18-inch screen.

Acer Nitro gaming laptop

(Image credit: Future)

I played a bit of Indiana Jones and the Great Circle on it, as you'd expect with an RTX 5070Ti GPU, it runs brilliantly at 1440p.

Acer Nitro laptop

(Image credit: Future)

Acer Nitro laptop

(Image credit: Future)

All of these laptops come with liquid metal thermal grease to keep them cool when gaming. It's a noisy environment here so can't really tell if they are loud. There doesn't seem to be any noticable fan noise.

OK, so figured out the 'S' means 'slim'. The Nitro 16S AI is less than 19.9mm thick. However, I don't see too much difference between that and the standard Nitro 16 AI (on the left).

Acer Nitro laptop

(Image credit: Future)

It might be quite hard to see but I placed the Nitro 16 AI on top of the 'S' version and you can see there is a slight difference in thickness. Not enough to justify a much higher price, though.

Acer Nitro laptop

(Image credit: Future)

Acer Nitro laptop

(Image credit: Future)

Acer Nitro laptop

(Image credit: Future)

Acer Nitro laptop

(Image credit: Future)

Acer Nitro laptop

(Image credit: Future)

Synology HQ tour

(Image credit: Future)

NVIDIA COMPUTEX KEYNOTE

(Image credit: Future)

What makes me think there's going to be a lot of AI talk at this keynote? Well, there's a few clues dotted around...

NVIDIA COMPUTEX KEYNOTE

(Image credit: Future)

NVIDIA COMPUTEX KEYNOTE

(Image credit: Future)

Nvidia Shield

NVIDIA COMPUTEX KEYNOTE

(Image credit: Future)

Good morning from Taipei, folks! This is John Loeffler, Components Editior for TechRadar, kicking off the biggest computing show of the year with live coverage of Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang's keynote address.

NVIDIA COMPUTEX KEYNOTE

(Image credit: Future)

OK, here we go.

Have you heard the good news about Tokens?

In fairness to Nvidia here, Computex isn't CES, with the latter being much more consumer product focused, so it's very understandable that this presentation is going to be 98% about industrial applications of advanced Nvidia data center and embedded hardware.

NVIDIA COMPUTEX KEYNOTE

(Image credit: Future)

NVIDIA COMPUTEX KEYNOTE

(Image credit: Future)

Huang really hitting the point that Nvidia isn't really a technology company anymore, but an AI infrastructure company. Given how many data center GPUs they've been selling, it's very hard to argue with that.

I will have a lot more to say about this later, but I 100% agree with Huang that 'intelligence infrastructure', i.e., AI, is following the exact same trajectory as the internet did in the 1990s.

Nvidia aiming for AI factory infrastructure—an industry measured "in the trillions of dollars", according to Huang—really reiterates my concerns about the future of Nvidia GeForce as a consumer product. With so much emphasis on AI and industrial products and services, how much time and resources will continue to be invested in making the best graphics cards generation after generation?

LOL, speak of the devil. The Nvidia GeForce RTX 5060 is here.

NVIDIA COMPUTEX KEYNOTE

(Image credit: Future)

Again, Computex is not nearly as consumer focused as CES, but woof, if you blinked, you'd have missed the announcement of Nvidia's new graphics card.

I know I keep harping on how little GeForce is talked about during these keynotes, but I think that gamers deserve a little more attention than Nvidia's been giving them. Nvidia's graphics cards are generally fantastic products, and gamers who've been buying them for more than two decades helped provide the stable and profitable foundation for Nvidia to develop the advanced AI technology that has turned it into a multi-trillion dollar company.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang presenting Grace Blackwell at Computex 2025

(Image credit: Nvidia)

The Asus Dual OC RTX 5060 being held by a person's left hand.

(Image credit: Future)

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang showing off the new Nvidia RTX 6000 Pro server racks at Computex 2025

(Image credit: Nvidia)

Our TR Pro colleagues have their work cut out for them today, let me tell you...

It looks like we're coming close to the end of Jensen Huang's keynote. Huang is bringing things back around to the importance of Taiwan in the AI industry.

This hasn't been a very well-kept secret, but it looks like Huang is closing out his keynote with the announcement of Nvidia Constellation, Nvidia's brand new global headquarters, will be located in Taipei, Taiwan.

Well, that's it for the Nvidia Computex 2025 Keynote. We'll have a lot more to say today and throughout the week as we cover all the latest from Taipei!

Qualcomm and Computex

(Image credit: Future)

Qualcomm and Computex

(Image credit: Future)

Before the keynote begins we are being treated to a video about how Qualcomm reinvented the PC.

Qualcomm is turning 40 this year, Cristiano Amon announces as he takes the stage.

Qualcomm and Computex

(Image credit: Future)

Another video. Over 85 Copilot+ laptops powered by Snapdragon chips.

Qualcomm and Computex

(Image credit: Future)

Amon explains how Qualcomm is working with Microsoft, and now we get a video from Satya Nadella, CEO of Microsoft. He mentions Recall, the controversial AI feature that keeps getting delayed. Brave.

Three times the native apps now run on Arm-based Snapdragon than when they launched. There's also over 50 NPU-powered features, according to Amon. 'The future is looking very very bright' he says.

Amon mentions the criticisms these laptops had regarding game performance, and now there are 1,500 supportef games. There's clips of Kingdom Come Deliverance II running on Snapdragon.

He talks about Epic Games and says 'in Windows, there's no drama with Epic!' - this is a dig at Apple, which is having an ongoing argument with Epic Games over bringing Fortnite (one of the world's most popular games) to iPhones.

Asus Zenbook A14 is being talked about, the world's thinnest Copilot+ PC laptop. Comes with 32 hours of battery life apparently. Impressive!

Qualcomm and Computex

(Image credit: Future)

Lots of AI mentions, and Amon promises he'll talk about what you can do with AI on Snapdragon laptops. I want him to convince me that AI is worthwhile on laptops.

Qualcomm wants to bring AI to all devices. Yey.

Qualcomm and Computex

(Image credit: Future)

Amon says he's not going to talk about how AI can help consumers (he did that last year), instead how it will change the way people work. Hmmm....

Lots of buzz words about agents and how AI could be the new UI (user interface), which can control your PC by understanding you and what you need.

It's a bit dry this bit but essentially AI will help you create business plans and gather data and process it.

'It's not about cloud or on device [AI]' says Amon. 'It's both.'

It'll be a big change for how we work, apparently, and will increase productivity. For some jobs (especially ones which involve working with lots of data), then I can see this, but for a lot of jobs I'm still not convinced.

I'll be attending a Q&A with Cristiano Amon in a bit, so hopefully he'll explain more about his vision for AI changing our lives. As at the moment, I'm still waiting. I'll hand over this live blog and will add some thoughts later.

ZP showing guests around Synology HQ

(Image credit: Future)

Qualcomm Snapdragon X 8-core chip

(Image credit: Qualcomm)

HP OmniBook 5 14 laptop

(Image credit: HP)

Good morning from Taiwan! It's 8am here, and I (Matt) am attending several roundtables with Qualcomm before I head over to the Computex show floor. As I mentioned before, Qualcomm is becoming an increasingly important player in computing, with some of the best laptops in the world running on its Arm-based Snapdragon X chips.

The first roundtable session is about to start. Alex Katouzian from Qualcomm will be hosting it, and it'll be about 'Snapdragon Vision: Navigating the Future of MCX'.

Mobile Computing and XR if you are wondering, like I was, what MCX stood for.

The XR element sounds interesting, could we hear about new smart glasses.

Alex Katouzian is starting with data centers. One of the biggest bits of news from yesterday was Qualcomm's entry into this space. Not the most relevant news for us at TechRadar, but it'll be interesting to see how Qualcomm challenges the likes of Intel, AMD and Nvidia.

Katouzian reiterates Qualcomm's aim to make the profits it makes from smartphones, once it's biggest area, just 50% of the business. Computers and automotives will be key to this - though smartphones will remain very important.

'The PC market is different - we had to go to market and establish strong relationships with not only PC OEMs, but also retail and commercial outlets.'

Now onto headsets like smartglasses, AI assistants could make a big difference with these products, which to be honest haven't really taken off in my view.

Though apparently Meta (company behind Facebook) is expecting sales of its smart glasses to grow by six times.

Multi device experiences will also be key - using smart glasses along with a smartwatch. Lots of businesses will be pushing this. Nice idea, but it'll be expensive for consumers. But Qualcomm wants people to use multiple devices powered by its hardware.

Almost every Android player making wearables is working with Qualcomm according to Katouzian.

I've heard companies, like Sony, talk before about their dream of being behind every device in a person's home. It's never really worked, maybe Apple has got closest with its ecosystem.

Interesting note that Qualcomm is talking to Microsoft regarding the Xbox handheld....

Kedar Kondap, SVP & GM, Compute and Gaming, Qualcomm Technologies is now hosting a Q&A session. He's talking about Copilot and how AI agents can make interacting with our PCs easier and more natural.

Using AI to generate images and slides is useful, yet is primative, says Kondap. He wants to see it evolve.

AI is a use case that people need to understand, according to Kedar Kondap.

There was a good question put to Kedar Kondap about Qualcomm's responsibility to make sure AI doesn't completely take over from humans (for things like replying to emails, creating art).

Foxconn CEO keynote at Computex 2025

(Image credit: Future)

foxconn ai factory sketch

(Image credit: Future)

Now, Liu is explaining the 'GDP paradigm shift effect' - outlining that as countries get more prosperous, they outsource lower paid labour - often to countries with lower GDPs. But, thanks to growing global economies, there are fewer and fewer countries to to outsource to. This is where AI and robotics (and Foxconn!) comes in, with artificial workers able to fill this gap - Foxconn hopes anyway.

Jensen Huang joins Foxconn at computex 2025

(Image credit: Future)

Hey folks, this is John, TechRadar's US Computing Editor, and I just spent the morning walking the show floor to find the coolest stuff I could find, and there was a lot to see, but stick with me while I pull together and show off some of the highlights I've seen so far.

Premium tech is alive and well at Computex

A Palit GeForce RTX 5090 Tornado concept GPU at Computex 2025

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

As far as consumer products go, exhibitors here are obviously trying to showcase their premiere products and concepts in the hopes of getting some attention from buyers, but they also want as much press attention as they can get (and it obviously works).

A lot of the products I saw this morning were gorgeous looking concept pieces like the Palit GeForce RTX 5090 Tornado GPU, which is one of the first RTX 5090 partner card to feature a dual fan flow through design like that found in the RTX 5090 Founders Edition from Nvidia.

An MSI Prestige 13 AI+ Ukiyo-e Edition laptop featuring a laquered lid inspired by The Great Wave off Kanagawa by Katsushika Hokusai

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

MSI, meanwhile, had a number of prestige products on display (some of which I will be writing about in more detail later today), but devices like the MSI Prestige 13 AI+ Ukiyo-e Edition laptop with a laquered lid featuring The Great Wave off Kanagawa by the great Japanese painter and printmaker Katsushika Hokusai. I have so much to say about this limited edition laptop, but it is a stunning laptop to behold.

A Cougar gaming chair at Computex 2025

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

I only got a passing glance at this Cougar gaming recliner on my way to the media room in TaiNEX #1, but you better believe I'm going back to the booth to get a better look (and hopefully they'll let me sit in it and see what this kind of luxury is like).

A pair of G Skill Trident Z5 Royal NEO RAM sticks in metallic gold and silver color

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

When i say that there are premium components out here, G. Skill literally rolled out a Trident Z5 Royal Neo RAM kit that features both gold and silver metallic heat spreaders (I didn't get a chance to ask if they are actually plated in this materials, though that seems very, very unlikely, but still...). If you want to flex with your build and make it look like a certain person's penthouse in midtown Manhattan, this is the RAM kit for you.

An MSI GeForce RTX 5090 Suprim Titanium Edition graphics card at Computex 2025

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

While not plated with gold, the MSI GeForce RTX 5090 Suprim Titanium Edition graphics card can definitely make you think it is at a glance, but it's actually built with titanium for a lightweight (relatively) GPU that might hold up better against component sag than other RTX 5090s, but I'm pretty sure that's not the point of this card.

Doom: The Dark Ages is pretty much everywhere

Another thing I noticed walking the show floor is how Doom: The Dark Ages is pretty much everywhere, both the game itself on PC and laptop displays for demo purposes but also as branded products from various exhibitors.

OK folks, I'm going to head back down to the show floor and see what more I can see, but I'll bring you highlights later today and throughout the week while I'm here in Taipei!

Intel has been showing off some of its upcoming Panther Lake chips at Computex, and they look mighty impressive. The focus here is on boosting performance in both AI and conventional workloads, while still retaining the fantastic power efficiency for better laptop battery life as seen in the Lunar Lake generation.

Apparently, the Panther Lake CPUs will also include a “next-gen built-in iGPU” - something that could prove to be significantly attractive to manufacturers of handheld gaming PCs, most of which currently favor AMD's Z-series chips.

A small aside: on the opposite side of the world, Dell's Technologies World 2025 event is ongoing in Las Vegas, with CEO Michael Dell taking to his own personal stage to discuss the laptop-maker's plans for AI advancements, new laptops, and the impending Windows 10 End of Life.

Asus Inference solutions at Computex 2025

(Image credit: Future)

Intel AI for Enterprise at Computex 2025

(Image credit: Future)

Synology PAS7700

(Image credit: Future)

Back with the main TR Computing team, we've now put together our roundup of the best laptops of Computex 2025. Occupying the number one slot is the phenomenally lightweight new Acer Swift Edge 14 AI, which doesn't sacrifice impressive specs for its ultra thin-and-light design. If you want to know the runners-up, well... go read the article! Seriously, go read it. It's so gosh-darned hot in Taipei right now. Please make it worth our while.

Hey folks, John Loeffler, TechRadar's Components Editor here, getting everything ready for the AMD Computex press conference set to go live in about half an hour. You can find a livestream of the event embedded above so you can follow along with me as I provide in-the-moment reactions to all the breaking news from AMD out of Computex 2025.

As for what we'll see announced at the press event, the RX 9060 cards are clearly top of mind now that Nvidia has launched what many expect will be the last non-Super card of this generation from Nvidia.

Of course, it won't be all about GPUs during AMD's event, as we might hear more about AMD's professional and industrial products, like Epyc server hardware, and there'll definitely be a lot of talk about AI.

The music is kicking up, so that's usually the cue that we're about to begin.

Jack Huynh, AMD's senior VP and GM for computing and graphics is taking the stage now, so almost certainly a Radeon announcement incoming.

"We're going big by going small," Huynh says.

Yes, the The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remaster really is amazing. That is all.

Huynh's shoutout to gamers is a refreshing change from Nvidia's keynote the other night.

AMD FSR Redstone looks like AMD's answer to Nvidia DLSS 3.5 Ray Reconstruction.

FSR Redstone will only be available to RDNA 4 cards.

The AMD Radeon RX 9060 XT announcement at computex 2025

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

No news on the RX 9060 non-XT, but the RX 9060 XT will feature 32 compute units, compared to the 56 compute units in the RX 9070, so it will definitely be a lot slower than the RX 9070 series, but it will come with 16GB GDDR6 VRAM, and according to Huynh, it will come in slightly faster in gaming than the RTX 5060 Ti when not using Frame Generation.

While Huynh is talking AI for enterprise and research, I dug up the we have on the RX 9060 XT so far:

Swipe to scroll horizontally
RX 9060 XT Specs

Price

Starting at $349.99 (UK and Australia pricing TBD)

Compute Units

32

Shading Units

Row 2 - Cell 1

2,048

Ray Accelerators

Row 3 - Cell 1

32

AI Processors

Row 4 - Cell 1

64

Boost Clock

Row 5 - Cell 1

3.1GHz

Memory Type

Row 6 - Cell 1

GDDR6

Memory Pool

Row 7 - Cell 1

16GB

Memory Interface

Row 8 - Cell 1

TBD

I'm gotten some more info from AMD and it looks like there will be an 8GB variant of the RX 9060 XT, but since the price Huynh gave for the 16GB spec was $349.99, the 8GB card will likely come in under $300, with the RX 9060 coming in even lower than that when it launches.

New Ryzen Threadripper 9000 series and Ryzen Threadripper Pro WX series processors will be available starting in July. More specs to come as I can scribble them down.

The new Threadripper 9000 series chips will top out at 64 cores/128 threads, while the new Threadripper 9000-WX series chips will top out at 96 cores and 192 threads. Both series will have a TDP of 350W, according to AMD.

The specs I've been able to pull together on Threadripper are as follows:

Swipe to scroll horizontally
AMD Threadripper 9000-WX series

Chip

Cores

Threads

Base Clock

Boost Clock

Cache

Socket

9995WX

96

192

2.5GHz

5.4GHz

384MB

sTR5

9985WX

64

128

3.2GHz

5.4GHz

256MB

sTR5

9975WX

32

64

4.0GHz

5.4GHz

128MB

sTR5

9965WX

24

48

4.2GHz

5.4GHz

128MB

sTR5

9955WX

16

32

4.5GHz

5.4GHz

64MB

sTR5

9945WX

12

24

4.7GHz

5.4GHz

64MB

sTR5

Swipe to scroll horizontally
AMD Threadripper 9000 series

Chip

Cores

Threads

Base Clock

Boost Clock

Cache

Socket

9980X

64

128

3.2GHz

5.4GHz

256MB

sTR5

9970X

32

64

4.0GHz

5.4GHz

128MB

sTR5

9960X

24

48

4.2GHz

5.4GHz

128MB

sTR5

We also have news on the new AMD Radeon AI Pro R9700 graphics card for professional workstations and AI development, available in July.

Swipe to scroll horizontally
AMD Radeon AI Pro R9700 specs

Memory Pool

32GB GDDR6

AI Accelerators

128

TDP

300W

Peak Half-Precision TFLOPS

96

Peak INT 4 Sparse TOPS

1,531

OK folks, that's it for me. I'm going to head out to the show floor now and get as much together today as I can. Stay tuned for all the latest at Computex 2025!

Synology PAS7700 launch event

(Image credit: Future)

Hall highlights the 'effortless setup' for deployment within minutes of setup even on mobile devices. The system offers ‘non-disruptive everything’ so replacing a RAM, updating a server, or anything else your organisation needs to work on won’t disrupt your service.

Synology PAS7700 launch

(Image credit: Future)

The PAS7700 has built in 3-2-1-1 protection capabilities, which includes replication , immutable snapshots, and backup options. The system has memory Cache protection, so memory maps are saved and can be replicated into a memory pool. there’s also hardware level fault tolerance and software/ firmware upgrade failover, which is a graceful process, meaning no interruptions to your processes. The failover occurs in under five seconds, so interruptions won’t be an issue for users.

Note that the device comes with the hardware security of AMD infinity guard and drive encryption - and MFA and access controls for extra layers of security. Immutability and volume encryption are also significant features on this platform, so valuable intellectual property is safe. Hall explains that login analysis and file activity/ransomware monitoring mean that Synology PAS7700 customer data is incredibly secure. All in all, the PAS7700 boasts powerful performance alongside cost efficiency.

Pricing is yet to be confirmed, or yet to be announced anyway - but we're assured this will come soon. VIP customers will get to test and pilot the Synology PAS700 series in August - so Synolgy has welcomed its top customers to get involved! As for the future, the GS3000 is 'coming along very well' and should be on offer in 2026 - and will be 'weavable' inside the tiering environment - Hall confirms 2026 will be a 'big year' for Synology releases.

Seagate Mosaic 3+

(Image credit: Future)

A short break from Synology, and its over to the Seagate stall next for Pro, with the award winning Seagate IronWolf Pro on show a hard drive with 24/7 performance that allows users to access their data wherever they are, whenever they need. Also on display is the Mozaic 3+ hard drive platform that "incorporates Seagate’s unique implementation of HAMR to deliver mass-capacity storage at unprecedented areal densities of 3 TB per disk and beyond" - and it looks funky too!

Back at Synology, and we're hearing about a 'New Chapter' in surveillance technology for the brand. Today, Synology surveillance solutions are an ecosystem that combine storage, AI powered solutions, and surveillance. Over 515,000 sites are protected by Synology surveillance solutions - across a wide range of industries from manufacturers to book stores.

Synology surveillance live demo

(Image credit: Future)

Synology C2 surveillance demo

(Image credit: Future)

To mitigate any risk of lost footage, the continuity-first infrastructure uses microSD cards for 24/7 industrial-grade recording. We're also being treated to a live demo of the failover offline mode - with the router unplugged, and the offline kicking in to continue to the live camera feed - even pulling up a failed Google search to prove connection has been lost! The cameras continue their feed - although it took a while to load back up, and crashed when the app was being loaded up after being disconnected.

The C2 launch is a big step for Synology as it makes a play into the surveillance market and expands its capabilities outside of storage. In the Q&A, Synology confirms that the models are GDPR compliant, and also that they use open-source models to fine-tune data.

Asus Ascent GX10 at Computex

(Image credit: Future)

I'm now at TrendMicro - hearing about digital twins, as well as virtual red teams and virtual blue teams, who help identify vulnerabilities in an organisations security infrastructure without causing damage or down-time. The Trend Vision One is on show here, an AI-powered cybersecurity platform that offers risk exposure management, security operations, and layered protection all in one place. Thanks to Ian from TrendMicro who explained all of the features in detail!

Phison is next, and we're taking a look at the E28 SSD Controller. It's the first ever SSD controller to have built-in AI processing power, and its more efficient - being able to reduce AI model fine-tuning costs by up to 90%,. This makes it a seriously cost-effecting and very scalable solution for enterprise AI deployment. This hopes to address challenges like customisation, data confidentiality, and cost. It's so good, that its already won an award at Computex!

If you're looking for a more detailed writeup of the AMD Radeon GPU news revealed at Team Red's presentation, our lovely news writer Darren Allen has some commentary on the new Radeon GPUs and how they'll stack up against Nvidia's competing cards. Spoiler alert: it's not looking great for Team Green in the budget GPU space right now.

Move over Nintendo, MSI unveils new handheld

An MSI MEG Vision X AI at Computex 2025

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

Our picks for the best gaming laptops at Computex 2025

Interested in what Computex 2025 had in store when it comes to monitors? Check this out: we've collated the very best in new PC displays being shown off at the event with our best monitors of Computex roundup.