A Look Around the Minisforum Stand at Computex 2026
A First Look Around the Minisforum Stand at Computex 2026
Computex 2026 is now underway in Taipei, and I am at the Minisforum stand looking over what the company has brought to the show floor this year. There are several compact systems on display, including the S5 all-flash NAS, the MS-03 workstation mini PC, and the smaller M2 Pro mini PC, with more possibly being added to this article as I continue working through the stand. What I am seeing is not just a single type of compact PC repeated in different sizes, but a mix of storage, workstation, and AI-focused hardware, each aimed at a slightly different use case. The S5 is the one that ties back most closely to my recent NAS coverage from mid-May, while the MS-03 and M2 Pro sit more firmly in Minisforum’s mini PC and workstation range. There is also a clear focus here on faster networking, newer Intel platforms, local AI acceleration, and making higher-performance desktop systems fit into smaller spaces.
Minisforum S5: A Silent All-Flash NAS for Smaller Spaces
The first system I am looking at is the Minisforum S5, an all-flash NAS that I previously covered in more detail in mid-May. At Computex, Minisforum is showing it again as part of its wider compact hardware line-up, and the basic idea remains the same: this is a small NAS built around M.2 SSD storage rather than traditional 3.5-inch or 2.5-inch hard drives. That matters because it changes both the size and noise profile of the system. With no spinning drives inside, Minisforum has also removed the fan, so the S5 is designed to run silently.
The S5 is positioned between lower-cost all-flash NAS systems and more expensive high-end models. Minisforum is clearly trying to avoid the main compromises often seen in cheaper SSD NAS devices, where the storage may be flash-based but the networking and I/O are not fast enough to make full use of it. Here, the inclusion of 10GbE and USB4/TBT4 gives the S5 more room to actually benefit from SSD performance, whether that is for direct transfers, faster network access, or use in a small media and editing setup. It is not being shown as a large enterprise NAS, but more as a compact flash storage system for users who want more speed and less noise than a hard drive-based box.
The other part of the S5 story is the newer platform inside. Minisforum lists 5 M.2 slots, WiFi 7, AV1 hardware encoding and decoding, and an iGPU plus NPU combination rated at 24 to 33 TOPS for lightweight AI tasks. That does not make it a heavy AI workstation, but it does suggest the S5 is intended to do more than just basic file storage.
The target audience seems fairly clear: home theater users, HiFi setups, small studios, Apple users looking for a quieter storage box, and people who like the idea of a NAS but do not want the noise, power draw, or physical size that usually comes with mechanical hard drives.
| Specification | Minisforum S5 All-Flash NAS |
|---|---|
| Product type | All-flash NAS |
| Launch timing | Mid-September |
| Storage | 5 x M.2 slots |
| Cooling | Fanless |
| Noise level | Silent operation, no fan and no spinning drives |
| Wired networking | 10GbE |
| External connectivity | USB4 / TBT4 ports |
| Wireless | WiFi 7 |
| AI hardware | iGPU + NPU |
| AI performance | 24 to 33 TOPS |
| Media support | AV1 hardware encoding and decoding |
| Positioning | Mid-range all-flash NAS with higher-end I/O features |
| Target users | Home theater, HiFi, small studio, quiet desktop storage, lightweight AI NAS use |
Minisforum MS-03: A Workstation Mini PC With Faster Networking and Newer Intel Hardware
The next system on the Minisforum stand is the MS-03, which follows on from the MS-01 rather than replacing something in the NAS range. This is important, because although it shares the same compact, high-I/O style that made the MS-01 interesting, the MS-03 is being presented as a workstation mini PC, not a storage appliance. Minisforum is describing it as a regular iteration of the MS-01, but the changes are not minor. The focus is on a newer Intel Panther Lake-H platform, faster memory, faster SSD support, upgraded networking, and added local AI acceleration.
Compared with the MS-01, the MS-03 moves to DDR memory up to 7200MHz and upgrades 2 SSD slots from PCIe 4.0 to PCIe 5.0. Wired networking is also improved, with 1 port moving from 2.5GbE to 10GbE, while the wireless card moves from WiFi 6E to WiFi 7. Minisforum is also raising the TDP from 60W to 70W, with a 240W power adapter as standard. On the display side, the HDMI connection is upgraded from HDMI 2.1 TMDS to HDMI 2.1 FRL, with CEC support included.
The AI angle is also more visible on this model than it was on the MS-01. The MS-03 adds an NPU rated at 50 TOPS, with Minisforum specifically pointing to Intel AI application support. That does not turn it into a GPU-heavy tower workstation, but it does make the system more relevant for local AI workloads, development, and applications that can take advantage of Intel’s newer platform features.
One trade-off is that the PCIe slot is reduced from x8 to x4 because of CPU PCIe lane limits. Minisforum says x4 is still enough for most expansion cards, although a graphics card will see some performance reduction if installed.
| Specification | Minisforum MS-03 Workstation Mini PC |
|---|---|
| Product type | Workstation mini PC |
| Launch timing | End of June |
| Positioning | Successor / iteration of the MS-01 |
| CPU platform | Intel Panther Lake-H |
| Memory support | DDR up to 7200MHz |
| SSD support | 2 x PCIe 5.0 SSDs |
| Wired networking | 10GbE port upgrade from previous 2.5GbE |
| Wireless | WiFi 7 |
| TDP | 70W |
| Power adapter | 240W standard adapter |
| Display output | HDMI 2.1 FRL |
| CEC support | Yes |
| AI hardware | Dedicated NPU |
| NPU performance | 50 TOPS |
| Expansion | PCIe slot reduced from x8 to x4 |
| Main trade-off | Slight graphics card performance reduction if using the PCIe slot for a GPU |
Minisforum M2 Pro: A Smaller Mini PC Built Around Local AI
The Minisforum M2 Pro is the smaller mini PC on the stand, and unlike the S5, it is not being presented as a NAS. This is more of a compact desktop system for users who want newer Intel hardware, stronger integrated graphics, faster memory, and local AI features in a smaller footprint. Minisforum is basing it on Intel’s Panther Lake platform, specifically listing PTL-H-12Xe, with a focus on combining CPU, GPU, and NPU resources for local AI tasks rather than relying only on cloud processing.
The headline figure here is up to 180 TOPS of total AI performance across the system. That includes a new NPU5 AI engine rated at up to 50 TOPS, alongside the CPU and Xe3 integrated GPU. Minisforum is also claiming more than a 50% graphics performance improvement from the Xe3 GPU, which is relevant for users looking at light creative work, GPU-assisted workloads, and general desktop performance without moving to a larger system with a discrete graphics card. Memory is another major part of the platform, with LPDDR5X 8533 listed for high-bandwidth workloads such as local model inference, multitasking, and media work.
In terms of physical setup, the M2 Pro is designed to reduce the amount of clutter around the desk. Minisforum lists a built-in power supply, an all-metal body, support for horizontal, vertical, and VESA-mounted installation, and a dedicated button for Microsoft Copilot.
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Connectivity is also a significant part of the design, with 10GbE, 2.5GbE, USB4, and support for up to 4 displays, including up to 8K at 60Hz. That makes the M2 Pro less of a basic office mini PC and more of a compact workstation-style system for local AI, remote work, media use, and higher-speed networked workflows.
| Specification | Minisforum M2 Pro Mini PC |
|---|---|
| Product type | Compact AI-focused mini PC |
| Launch timing | Early September |
| CPU platform | Intel Panther Lake, PTL-H-12Xe |
| Total AI performance | Up to 180 TOPS |
| NPU | New-generation NPU5 |
| NPU performance | Up to 50 TOPS |
| GPU | Intel Xe3 integrated graphics |
| Claimed GPU improvement | More than 50% graphics performance boost |
| Memory | LPDDR5X 8533 |
| Storage | 3 x M.2 2280 PCIe 4.0 SSDs |
| Wired networking | 10GbE + 2.5GbE |
| External connectivity | USB4 |
| Power design | Built-in power supply |
| Chassis | Lightweight all-metal body |
| Mounting options | Horizontal, vertical, and VESA-mounted setup |
| Display support | Up to 4 displays, up to 8K at 60Hz |
| Extra feature | One-touch Microsoft Copilot button |
| Target users | Local AI users, remote professionals, software engineers, media creators, education, edge AI use |
Minisforum N4 NAS: A Compact 4-Bay NAS with Intel Hardware
Also on the Minisforum stand at Computex 2026 is the N4 NAS, a compact 4-bay system that sits in a different part of the range from the larger N5 Max and the silent S5 all-flash NAS. At first glance, the N4 looks like it could have been built around a lower-power ARM platform, especially given the smaller chassis and more compact layout. However, Minisforum is instead using an Intel Core 3 x86 processor here, with a 6-core configuration and an early target of 16GB LPDDR memory onboard. That gives the N4 a more conventional mini PC-style hardware base than some entry NAS systems, and it also fits with Minisforum’s wider direction of using Intel and AMD platforms across its NAS products.
Storage is split between 4 SATA bays and 2 M.2 NVMe slots, giving the N4 a more flexible layout than a simple 4-bay hard drive NAS. The SATA bays are there for conventional high-capacity storage, while the M.2 slots can be used for faster flash storage, caching, or other SSD-based tasks depending on the final software implementation. On the rear, Minisforum is showing 10GbE and 2.5GbE networking, USB4 connectivity, and WiFi 7, which is a stronger I/O mix than expected on a smaller 4-bay NAS. That gives the system a better chance of handling faster local transfers, SSD-assisted workloads, and mixed home or small office use.
The chassis is also worth noting. Although the N4 looks as if it might be plastic at first, the unit on display uses a metal body, with ventilation across the top and a cooling path running through the system. Minisforum still appears to be in the early development stage with this model, but the direction is clear enough: this is not being treated as a very basic home NAS. Instead, the N4 looks like a compact Intel-based NAS that combines HDD storage, NVMe support, 10GbE, USB4, WiFi 7, and a more rugged chassis design. It also continues the company’s wider Computex theme of leaning into x86 processors, faster networking, and AI-capable platforms rather than moving toward ARM-based NAS hardware.
| Specification | Minisforum N4 NAS |
|---|---|
| Product type | Compact 4-bay NAS |
| Status | Early development / shown at Computex 2026 |
| CPU | Intel Core 3 |
| CPU architecture | x86 |
| CPU configuration | 6-core processor |
| Memory | Targeting 16GB LPDDR onboard memory |
| Main storage | 4 x SATA bays |
| Flash storage | 2 x M.2 NVMe slots |
| Wired networking | 10GbE + 2.5GbE |
| External connectivity | USB4 |
| Wireless | WiFi 7 |
| Chassis | Metal body |
| Cooling | Internal cooling path with top ventilation |
| Positioning | Compact Intel-based NAS with stronger I/O than a basic 4-bay system |
| Related Minisforum NAS range | Sits below larger N5 Max and alongside the S5 all-flash NAS in the Computex line-up |
Minisforum PCIe Expansion Card: 4 x NVMe, OCuLink and 20Gb USB on 1 Card
Also on the Minisforum stand is a PCIe expansion card that is a little less conventional than the usual multi-NVMe adapter. At a basic level, this is a 4-bay M.2 NVMe PCIe card, but the design goes beyond simply adding extra SSD slots.
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The card includes active cooling, a heatsink assembly, copper heat pipe cooling, and 4 M.2 NVMe positions under the top section. When used with a single SSD, the card can provide up to PCIe Gen 4 x4 to that drive, while a fully populated 4-drive setup appears to divide the available bandwidth across the installed SSDs. This makes it more of a compact high-speed storage expansion option than a simple passive adapter.
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The more unusual part is the additional I/O built into the card. Minisforum has added an OCuLink port at the base, alongside a USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 20Gbps USB port. There is also a rear switch that appears to change the OCuLink output between PCIe mode and SATA mode. Multi-M.2 PCIe cards are not new, and there are already expansion cards that combine NVMe storage with networking or other add-ons, but seeing OCuLink added alongside 4 NVMe slots and 20Gb USB is less common.
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It fits with Minisforum’s wider Computex approach of combining storage, expansion, and compact workstation use cases into products that are not always easy to place in a single category.
| Specification | Minisforum PCIe NVMe / OCuLink Expansion Card |
|---|---|
| Product type | PCIe expansion card |
| Main function | Multi-NVMe storage expansion |
| M.2 slots | 4 x M.2 NVMe |
| SSD interface | PCIe Gen 4 |
| Single SSD bandwidth | Up to PCIe Gen 4 x4 |
| Fully populated bandwidth | Shared across 4 installed SSDs |
| Controller | AMD controller |
| Cooling | Active cooling system |
| Thermal design | Heatsink + copper heat pipe |
| Additional port | OCuLink |
| USB connectivity | USB 3.2 Gen 2×2, 20Gbps |
| Rear switch | PCIe / SATA mode switch for OCuLink output |
| Positioning | Storage and external expansion card for compact workstation or high-I/O systems |
| Main point of interest | Combines 4 x NVMe, OCuLink, and 20Gb USB on 1 PCIe card |
Thoughts From the Minisforum Stand
From what I am seeing at the Minisforum stand, the company is using Computex 2026 to show a wider spread of compact systems rather than focusing on a single product type or single massive ‘launch’ of a product for 2026. This kinda makes sense, as the hardware market for their products has no doubt taken something of a hit with the rise in HDDs. SSD and RAM market to deter buyers. The S5 is the storage-focused device here, and its main point of interest is the move toward a quieter all-flash NAS with faster I/O than many entry-level SSD NAS systems. The MS-03 is a different kind of product, with a stronger focus on workstation use, newer Intel hardware, 10GbE, PCIe 5.0 storage, and a dedicated NPU. The M2 Pro then takes some of that same AI and connectivity direction into a smaller mini PC design with a built-in power supply and a more desk-friendly layout. I may add more devices to this article as I continue going through the stand, but the early picture is that Minisforum is putting more emphasis on local AI, faster networking, and compact systems that do not require a full-size desktop tower.
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