At Computex 2026, an SSD With a Screen Was Shown That Lets You See What's on It Without Even Plugging It Into a PC
At the T‑CREATE booth during Computex 2026, TEAMGROUP gathered its most eye‑catching new products for content creators, generative AI work, and heavy‑duty computing.
The centerpiece was the T‑CREATE EXPERT P35S external drive, which won a Computex 2026 Best Choice Award and features a two‑stage data destruction mechanism. Activation doesn’t just wipe the partition table — it makes data unrecoverable at the hardware level. The follow‑up, the P35SG, adds a wireless channel so the procedure can be triggered remotely without touching the device. In an emergency, it works even if the owner is far away from the drive, and an extra notification system reports the wipe status in real time.
For workstations, they showed T‑CREATE EXPERT AI LPCAMM2 memory modules in the swappable LPCAMM2 form factor — turning laptop RAM into an upgradeable component instead of a soldered‑down chipset. A single module holds up to 64 GB and delivers up to 8533 MT/s at a low 1.05 V. Long‑haul stability comes from their own graphene‑based cooling, no bulky heatsinks required. Next to it was the T‑CREATE EXPERT AI 4R CUDIMM desktop memory with a 4‑rank architecture. One stick can carry 128 GB, speeds hit 8000 MT/s at 1.1 V, and engineers used a perforated design with convection holes to manage heat.
Among the SSDs, the T‑CREATE MASTER Ai I6E stood out — it uses PCIe 6.0, comes in the E1.S form factor, and hits 28 GB/s sequential reads. A special shout‑out goes to the T‑CREATE EXPERT P33 external SSD. On its housing is an E‑Ink screen that keeps information even when power is cut. The display shows used capacity, drive health, and the project name. You can change labels and categories to know exactly what’s on that drive without having to hook it up to a computer.
The core message from the T‑CREATE brand has clearly shifted from “memory and storage for creative work” to “data protection and flexible scalability for AI workloads.”
What do you think — will remote data destruction become a standard feature in SSDs, or stay a niche solution? Share your thoughts in the comments.
-
At Computex 2026, the First MSI Laptop on NVIDIA’s New Chip Debuts -
Graphics Cards, Monitors, and AI: GIGABYTE Brought Its Full Arsenal of New Gear to Computex 2026 -
VGTimes at Computex 2026 in Taipei. The summer's biggest event for tech enthusiasts -
At Computex 2026, They Showed Off a Katana-Shaped PC — and It Glows From the Inside
