COMPUTEX 2026 | Synology expands enterprise storage, AI and surveillance portfolio
Taipei-based data management company Synology used Computex 2026 to unveil new enterprise storage platforms, AI-powered software tools, data protection solutions, surveillance products and consumer devices, reflecting a broader strategy that extends beyond its traditional network-attached storage business.
The company is participating in Computex 2026 through a booth exhibition from June 2 to June 5, a media event on June 3 and a keynote presentation on June 4. Topics highlighted during the event include the next generation of Synology DiskStation Manager (DSM), cyber resiliency, data freedom and enterprise storage innovation.
Enterprise storage portfolio expands
Synology introduced additions to its enterprise storage lineup, which now includes the RS/FS Series for general-purpose storage, the PAS Series for active-active primary storage and the GS Series for scale-out object storage.
Among the new systems is the XS+/XS Series, designed for enterprise data management. Synology said the platform delivers sequential read speeds of up to 6,700 MB/s and write speeds of up to 4,300 MB/s. The system supports more than 1.5 PB of fully scaled raw capacity and offers optional GPU card support.
The company also introduced the FS Series, an all-flash storage platform for enterprise environments. Synology said the system delivers more than 990,000 random read IOPS and more than 270,000 random write IOPS, while supporting 100GbE, 50GbE and 25GbE connectivity. Optional GPU card support is available.
For mission-critical workloads, Synology highlighted the PAS7700 active-active all-flash NVMe storage platform. According to the company, the system provides more than 2 million random read IOPS, sequential read throughput of 30 GB/s, latency of less than one millisecond and up to 1.6 PB of fully scaled raw capacity.
Synology also previewed the GS3400, a scale-out object and file storage platform scheduled for release at a later date. The company said the system can scale to 48 nodes and 576 drives per cluster, offering up to 13.8 PB of raw capacity and sequential read speeds of up to 70 GB/s. The platform supports SMB, NFS and S3 protocols.
New data management capabilities
The company unveiled Synology Tiering, a feature designed to improve storage efficiency by automatically moving infrequently accessed data to lower-cost storage while reserving high-performance resources for critical workloads.
Synology also introduced new data reduction technologies that use deduplication and compression to reduce storage requirements. The company said these features will be available exclusively with Synology-developed hard drives and solid-state drives.
AI and data protection updates
The company expanded its ActiveProtect data protection platform with new rackmount appliances and broader workload support. The platform now covers cloud services, virtual machines, servers, endpoints, file servers and databases. Supported environments include Microsoft Azure, Amazon Web Services, Microsoft 365, Google Workspace, VMware, Hyper-V, Nutanix, Proxmox, Windows Server, Linux, Oracle and Microsoft SQL Server.
Artificial intelligence also featured prominently in Synology’s announcements. The company introduced AI-powered content generation, content search and workflow automation capabilities. Synology said the platform supports cloud-based large language model integrations and will support self-hosted LLMs in the future, while automatically redacting sensitive data.
The company also previewed DSM Agent, an AI assistant integrated into DSM. Synology said the tool can perform health checks, monitor service status, investigate security incidents and validate backup processes. DSM Agent is expected to be available on compatible systems that support GPU cards.
In addition, Synology introduced ChatPlus and Meet, private-cloud-based collaboration tools for messaging and video conferencing.
Surveillance and consumer products
Synology expanded its surveillance portfolio with the introduction of the FC600 360-degree fisheye camera, the DC400 4-megapixel dome camera and the DC500Z and DC800 dome cameras with 5-megapixel and 8-megapixel sensors.
The company also showcased Surveillance365, a cloud-based surveillance platform designed for deployments that do not require on-premises servers. The service supports edge-based recording, cloud backup and rapid deployment.
For consumers, Synology announced the BeeStation Plus with 4TB of storage and the BeeCamera home monitoring solution. According to the company, BeeCamera provides local recording and AI-based detection and alerts for people, pets and vehicles when paired with BeeStation Plus hardware.
The announcements reflect Synology’s continued expansion into enterprise infrastructure, cyber resilience, AI-enabled software and surveillance systems as organizations face growing demands for data storage, protection and management.
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