ASUS
ASUSTeK Computer Inc. (ASUS) is a Taiwan-based electronics and technology company that designs and manufactures Process Control System (PCS), components, peripherals, and related infrastructure platforms for consumer, commercial, and enterprise use.
- Client devices including laptops, desktops, workstations, all-in-one PCS, and Chromebooks for consumer, business, and education environments.
- PC components and hardware platforms such as motherboards, graphics cards, power supplies, and cooling solutions for client and workstation build-outs.
- Displays and peripherals including monitors, projectors, networking devices, keyboards, mice, headsets, and other accessories for office, home, and esports deployments.
- Server, storage, and data center hardware (data center infrastructure) including rack servers, Graphics Processing Unit (GPU) servers, edge servers, and related platforms for Artificial Intelligence (AI), High performance computing (HPC), and virtualization workloads.
- Mobile and edge devices including smartphones, gaming phones, and tablets, along with related ecosystems and accessories.
More About ASUS
ASUSTeK Computer Inc. (ASUS) operates as a global hardware and electronics provider with offerings that span client computing, data center infrastructure, and edge devices used in enterprise, education, government, and commercial environments.
In client computing, ASUS supplies laptops, desktops, workstations, and all-in-one PCS that map to endpoint computing and end-user device categories. Many of these systems target IT-managed fleets in business and public sector deployments, including devices certified for Windows-based enterprise environments and ChromeOS-based education and lightweight productivity use cases. ASUS also offers gaming-focused PCS that share components and platforms with professional visualization and content creation systems, enabling standardized hardware baselines where organizations support both productivity and graphics-intensive workloads.
ASUS is a major vendor of motherboards and graphics cards (PC hardware platforms) that underpin custom-built desktops, workstations, and small office servers. These components support common industry standards such as x86 processor architectures, PCI Express (PCIe) expansion, Double Data Rate (DDR) memory standards, and mainstream storage interfaces like Serial ATA (SATA) and Non-volatile Memory Express (NVME). This positions ASUS hardware within typical enterprise and Server Message Block (SMB) architectures that rely on off-the-shelf components, standardized drivers, and compatibility with major operating systems and hypervisors.
For data center infrastructure (data center servers), ASUS develops rack servers, GPU servers, and edge servers that target workloads such as virtualization, private cloud, AI and Machine Learning (ML), HPC, and data analytics. These systems generally align with standard data center form factors and support common technologies such as IPMI or vendor-specific Out-of-Band Management (OOB), redundant power configurations, and integration with Ethernet-based networking. ASUS server platforms are designed for use with mainstream server operating systems and container or virtualization stacks used by enterprises and service providers.
In peripherals and displays (endpoint peripherals), ASUS provides monitors, projectors, webcams, headsets, and input devices used in office, home office, and esports contexts. Many commercial displays support interfaces such as HDMI, DisplayPort, and USB-C, which simplifies integration with docking stations, thin clients, and modern laptops in hot-desking or conference room setups. Certain product lines in this area address color-critical content creation, multi-display trading or control room environments, and gaming-focused refresh rate requirements, all within standard VESA and display interface ecosystems.
ASUS also participates in networking (networking hardware) through consumer and small-business routers, mesh Wi-Fi systems, and related network devices. These products use standard networking protocols such as Ethernet, Wi-Fi (IEEE 802.11 family), and common security mechanisms like WPA2/WPA3, placing them in typical small-office and home-office infrastructure stacks. Some devices support app-based or web-based management suited to non-specialist administrators in small organizations.
Mobile and edge devices from ASUS, including smartphones and tablets (mobile endpoints), run mainstream mobile operating systems and integrate with standard enterprise mobility management, identity, and collaboration platforms where supported. Gaming-oriented phones extend ASUS’s presence into performance-centric mobile hardware, which can also be used for streaming, content capture, and field applications that rely on high-refresh displays and capable SoCs.
Across these portfolios, ASUS aligns with established hardware ecosystems, industry-standard interfaces, and common operating environments, which enables integration into enterprise procurement catalogs, managed device programs, and data center infrastructure plans.