All the news from Computex, the largest IT tradeshow in Asia.
The 5.7-inch Liquid X1 boasts some serious processing power with its eight-core 1.7GHz CPU and Cat 4 LTE capabilities.
The Windows and Android phone, tablet and notebook combo aims to please even the most fussy user by packing everything you need (bar iOS) into a 12.5-inch device.
Dell adds a new entry-level all-in-one to its line up with the Pentium-powered Inspiron 20 3000.
Has Asus taken the whole phablet concept overboard with the 8-inch Intel-powered FonePad 8? Perhaps.
Gigabyte's X7 gets an upgrade since it first appeared at CES 2014, while the X3 Plus makes a claim for a "world's most powerful" status.
Dell's freshened up its Venue tablets, putting Intel's Merrifield chips inside and offering call capabilities in some countries.
Once the domain of the traditional PC, the Computex trade show is promising a mammoth showing from wearable device manufacturers.
The Transformer Book T300 Chi is a 12.5-inch super-slim two-in-one and is just 7.3mm thin in tablet mode. Also announced was the Transformer Book V that runs both Android and Windows.
The company shows off its new 8-inch Fonepad, the new Transformer Book V powered by both Android and Windows and the super-slim Transformer Book T300 Chi -- all powered by Intel processors.
Reminiscent of the original netbook, these new 10.1-inch Android hybrids are powered by a quad-core Intel Atom Bay Trail processor.
Intel will be busy at Computex. Expect a raft of announcements centered on its small-device strategy, which the chip giant is trying to get into high gear.
Like the rest of the world, Computex is shifting inexorably toward a more mobile take on the PC world. So how does that shape what we'll see out of Taipei this week?