addlink Launches 2026 Virtual Showcase Featuring PCIe Gen5 SSDs, DDR5 CUDIMM, and a USB-C NVMe Docking Station

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addlink Technology has opened its 2026 Virtual Showcase, an online product preview covering the Taiwanese storage maker’s upcoming lineup across PCIe Gen5 SSDs, DDR5 CUDIMM memory, portable storage, and docking solutions. It’s not a physical show floor (Ed: This means they won’t be at Computex, eh?), but there’s a reasonable amount of product detail to dig into.

The headliner is the G57 PCIe Gen5 SSD, which addlink says will hit sequential read/write speeds of up to 14,000 MB/s using a 6nm PCIe Gen5 controller with integrated thermal management. That puts it in the upper tier of Gen5 drives competing for space in AI PC and high-performance workstation builds. The G55, a step-down Gen5 option, is also in the lineup and is positioned more toward content creators and “demanding everyday workflows,” which in practice means prosumer systems that don’t need the absolute top-end controller.

On the memory side, the SC5 DDR5 CUDIMM supports speeds up to 8400 MT/s. CUDIMMs (Clock Driver DIMMs) add an on-module clock buffer that Intel introduced with Arrow Lake to clean up signal integrity at higher frequencies. The G55H, a Gen5 SSD with a bundled heatsink, rounds out the desktop gaming kit.

The B31 Magnetic NVMe Docking Station is probably the most practical product in the bunch. It combines a built-in NVMe SSD enclosure with PD 100W charging, HDMI 4K at 60Hz, USB-C, USB-A, and SD/TF card slots in a single compact unit. If the pricing is reasonable, it’s the kind of one-cable desk solution that portable creators and laptop-first users have been buying from various vendors for years, just with the NVMe expansion baked in rather than bolted on.

Portable storage gets two entries: the P30, which uses USB4 to reach up to 4,000 MB/s and includes magnetic attachment for mobile workflows, and the P50, a more pedestrian everyday portable aimed at broad device compatibility. The P30 speed claim is on par with the fastest USB4 portable drives currently on the market, so real-world numbers will be worth watching once review units ship.

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David Schroth
David is a computer hardware enthusiast that has been tinkering with computer hardware for the past 25 years and writing reviews for more than ten years. He's the Founder and Editor in Chief of The FPS Review.

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