One of the most striking things about MSI's stand was this LED based screen that cycled through the company's slogans for the show.
MSI was showing off several 'Draken' branded PCs at the show. This flagship model uses Thermaltake's striking Level 10 case.
One of the other Draken models featured this button that links in with MSI's OC Genie software in order to make overclocking more accessible.
A collection of MSI's high end graphics cards, all using its custom Twin Frozr II heatsink. The gold coloured card is the newly announced GeForce GTX 465 card, the latest model based on NVIDIA's Fermi architecture.
This is MSI's standard GeForce GTX 465 in action. It uses a very similar heatink design to the GeForce GTX 470 but is cheaper and hence less powerful.
This is a nifty piece of hardware that MSI has named GUS (Graphics Upgrade Solution). It enables end users to upgrade their laptop graphics for when they want to game at home.
The GUS box attaches to a notebook via Expresscard. This means that it contacts the CPU via a single PCI Express 1.0 lane. This restricts the card used inside the box to the mid range, but this is still a noticeable upgrade for non-gaming focused laptops.
From the end one can see that this is basically a dual height PCI-Express caddy. It takes a standard video card, offering the normal selection of HDMI, DVI or Displayport outputs.
MSI was also showing off a 3D laptop. This uses a polarised glasses solution, rather than the active shutter glasses used with products based on NVIDIA's 3D Vision kit.
One surprising announcement made by MSI at COmputex was that it was pairing with car audio manufacturer Dynaudio for its gaming laptops. The branding and somewhat striking speaker design appeared on quite a few different models.
To demonstrate its touchscreen All-In-One PCs MSI employed an artist, who was using a paintbrush directly on the screen to paint portraits of visitors to the show.
This is the guts of MSI's Eyefinity display. Normally eyefinity only supports two HDMI/DVI screens - the rest need to use Displayport. This is the mess created when having to use Displayport to HDMI adaptors to get the same effect.
One of the most striking things about MSI's stand was this LED based screen that cycled through the company's slogans for the show.