Nvidia Set to Dominate 1,500-Exhibitor Computex as Taiwan Stakes Bigger Role in $150 Billion AI Infrastructure
Updated
Updated · Reuters · May 29
Nvidia Set to Dominate 1,500-Exhibitor Computex as Taiwan Stakes Bigger Role in $150 Billion AI Infrastructure
14 articles · Updated · Reuters · May 29
$150 billion a year in Taiwan is the spending level Jensen Huang said Nvidia could reach, underscoring why the company and the island are expected to dominate Computex in Taipei on June 2-5.
Taiwan's pitch has widened beyond chipmaking to full AI infrastructure—servers, packaging, components and data-center integration—as exports of servers jumped to $60 billion in 2025 from $571 million in 2017.
Huang opens the show with Monday's keynote after a week of meetings with TSMC, Foxconn and Quanta, with attention centered on Nvidia's Vera Rubin platform, robotics and AI manufacturing plans.
Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan is the other closely watched speaker, while AMD's Lisa Su has already pledged more than $10 billion for Taiwan's AI sector and other chip chiefs from Qualcomm, Arm, Marvell and NXP will attend.
The gathering comes despite rising cross-strait tension after Xi Jinping warned Donald Trump this month that mishandling Taiwan could trigger conflict, even as business on the island keeps expanding.
As tech giants bet billions on Taiwan, is the world's AI future becoming dangerously dependent on one island?
Will Nvidia's rumored Arm-based 'monster' laptop finally dethrone the x86 chip's long reign in personal computing?
Nvidia’s Vera Rubin NVL72 and the $100 Billion AI Race: How Taiwan Became the Indispensable Core of Global AI Infrastructure in 2026
Overview
Computex 2026 highlighted Taiwan’s extraordinary strength in the global tech industry, as the island commands most advanced foundry capacity and anchors the AI chip and server supply chain. Nvidia, a leader in AI chip manufacturing, showcased its innovative GPUs that power everything from autonomous vehicles to large language models. The company’s strong presence at Computex and its ongoing commitment to the region—such as the Constellation headquarters project in Taipei, set to become its Asia-Pacific base—demonstrate how Nvidia is deepening ties with Taiwan. This partnership is shaping the future of AI supercomputing and global technology infrastructure.