MSI Showcases Advanced Server Solutions for Artificial Intelligence at Japan IT Week Spring 2025

MSI is highlighting its next-generation, Artificial Intelligence-focused server platforms at Japan IT Week Spring 2025, emphasizing high-performance, modular solutions for cloud and enterprise workloads.

MSI, a global leader in high-performance server technology, is set to spotlight its latest Artificial Intelligence-driven innovations at Japan IT Week Spring 2025. At Booth #21-2, the company will present a comprehensive portfolio of server platforms engineered for the increasing demands of next-generation Artificial Intelligence and cloud computing workloads.

Among the showcased solutions are the NVIDIA MGX AI Servers, which feature a modular design for GPU-accelerated computing. These servers are tailored to optimize both model training and inference tasks, providing enterprises with the flexibility and resource efficiency required for demanding Artificial Intelligence projects. Additionally, MSI´s Core Compute line introduces Multi-Node Servers designed to maximize compute density and efficiency, which is particularly valuable for Artificial Intelligence inference tasks and cloud service providers striving for scalability and performance.

The company will also highlight its Open Compute ORv3 Servers, offering enhanced scalability and thermal efficiency for hyperscale Artificial Intelligence applications. Complementing these, MSI´s Enterprise Servers bring together balanced compute, storage, and networking capabilities, supporting seamless workload transitions across both cloud and edge environments. According to Danny Hsu, General Manager of MSI Enterprise Platform Solutions, these advancements are focused on delivering performance efficiency, high compute density, and scalable workloads, ensuring that organizations have the necessary processing power to unlock the real-world potential of Artificial Intelligence.

52

Impact Score

What businesses need to know about the EU cyber resilience act

The EU cyber resilience act is turning product cybersecurity into a legal requirement for companies that sell digital products into the European Union. A key compliance milestone arrives in September 2026, well before the full regulation takes effect in 2027.

Claude Mythos and cyber insurance’s next inflection point

Claude Mythos is being treated by governments and regulators as a potential systemic cyber risk with implications for financial stability and insurance markets. Its emergence is intensifying pressure on insurers to clarify whether Artificial Intelligence-enabled cyber losses are covered, excluded, or require new stand-alone products.

OpenAI expands ChatGPT ads with self-serve manager

OpenAI is widening its ChatGPT ads pilot with a beta self-serve Ads Manager, new bidding options and broader measurement tools. The push signals a deeper move into advertising as the company expands the program into several international markets.

OpenAI launches Artificial Intelligence deployment consulting unit

OpenAI has created a new consulting and deployment business aimed at helping enterprises build and roll out Artificial Intelligence systems. The move mirrors a similar push by Anthropic and signals a broader effort by model providers to capture more of the enterprise services market.

SK Group warns DRAM shortages could curb memory use

SK Group chairman Chey Tae-won warned that customers may reduce memory consumption through infrastructure and software optimization if DRAM suppliers fail to raise output. Demand from Artificial Intelligence data centers is keeping the market tight as memory makers weigh expansion against the long timelines for new fabs.

Contact Us

Got questions? Use the form to contact us.

Contact Form

Clicking next sends a verification code to your email. After verifying, you can enter your message.