Off-Prem

ASUS quietly built supercomputers, datacenters and an LLM. Now it's quietly selling them all together

The plan is a slow build – not a breakout into enterprise tech


Taiwan's ASUS is best known for its laptops and Wi-Fi kit, but it's quietly building an enterprise tech and cloud business – and slowly introducing it to the world after big successes at home.

The Register learned of ASUS's plans at last week's Computex conference in Taiwan, where we met Jackie Hsu, a senior vice president Jackie Hsu, who also serves as co-head of the Open Platform Business and IoT business groups.

Hsu pointed out that ASUS helped to build the Taiwania 2 supercomputer – a nine-petaflop machine that hit the Top 500 Supercomputer list at number 20 when it debuted in 2018.

And last year it won a bid to help build the Taiwania 4 supercomputer. Hsu told us ASUS built a datacenter to house Taiwania 4, and achieved a power use efficiency (PUE) rating of 1.17 – a decent achievement for any facility, but a very good one in a hot and humid location like Taiwan.

Another little-known ASUS initiative is the Formosa Foundation Model – a 176 billion parameter large language model (LLM) tuned to generate text with traditional Chinese semantics. Hsu said LLMs trained on data in local languages are essential, as the corpus used to train most such models is dominated by American English.

ASUS also offers servers – vanilla models, nodes for supers, and the AI servers announced last week at Computex – and has done for years without becoming a major player in the field. But Hsu told The Register that the Taiwanese giant has engaged with hyperscalers who considered it as a supplier for their server fleets, and was able to demonstrate it can produce exceptionally energy-efficient machines.

ASUS is now putting together all of the above as an offering to clients. Hsu said he's already engaged with customers who could not match ASUS's ability to build datacenters with 1.17 PUE and seen interest in the Formosa Foundation Model.

The senior vice president said ASUS has already entered several engagements in which it designs and build substantial systems to run AI, offering much of the software and hardware stack needed to do the job.

Hsu conceded that ASUS's small scale as a server maker compared to rivals means it cannot always compete on price – but said clients are willing to pay for its complete offering.

"This is definitely a big growth area for us," he told The Register.

For now, the company is moving quietly. Over time, Hsu hopes ASUS will become more of an enterprise player. And with demand for compute surging along with interest in AI, it has a chance to succeed – in its own neighborhood and beyond. ®

Send us news
Post a comment

Despite Wall Street jitters, AI hopefuls keep spending billions on AI infrastructure

Sunk cost fallacy? No, I just need a little more cash for this AGI thing I’ve been working on

Network edge? You get 64-bit Armv9 AI. You too, watches. And you, server remote management. And you...

Arm rolls out the Cortex-A320 for small embedded gear that dreams of big-model inference

Lenovo isn't fussed by Trumpian tariffs or finding enough energy to run AI

Enterprise hardware biz produced record revenue, just $1M of profit, but execs think losses are behind it

Like a kid handing in homework at the last minute, Supermicro finally files its missing financial figures

SMCI had to come up with long-delayed report – or lose its slot on NASDAQ again

Apple promises to spend $500B, hire 20K over 4 years to swerve Trump import tariffs

Sorry, that should read: Boost US manufacturing and R&D, believe in the American people, etc etc

Three charged in Singapore with alleged link to illicit shipments of Nvidia GPUs to China

Accused face up to 20 years in prison

We meet the protesters who want to ban Artificial General Intelligence before it even exists

STOP AI warns of doomsday scenario, demands governments pull the plug on advanced models

Euro cloud biz trials 'server blades in a cold box' system

Hot air or a 50% energy saving? Exoscale datacenter runs proof-of-concept to test veracity of Digger's claims

How nice that state-of-the-art LLMs reveal their reasoning ... for miscreants to exploit

Blueprints shared for jail-breaking models that expose their chain-of-thought process

LLM aka Large Legal Mess: Judge wants lawyer fined $15K for using AI slop in filing

Plus: Anthropic rolls out Claude 3.7 Sonnet

UK's new thinking on AI: Unless it's causing serious bother, you can crack on

Plus: Keep calm and plug Anthropic's Claude into public services

As China embraces Big Tech again, Alibaba plans vast spend to push for artificial general intelligence

Plus: Samsung exec jailed for selling DRAM secrets; ASUS launches sweetly scented mouse; Toyota’s smart city nears opening; and more