AMD at Dell Technologies World 2026: Built for Enterprise AI

May 04, 2026

A logo illustrating AMD's presence at DTW 2026.

AMD will join Dell Technologies World in Las Vegas from May 18–21, where thousands of IT leaders, infrastructure teams, and technology partners will gather to discuss the systems, software, and services shaping enterprise computing. The event gives AMD an opportunity to meet with customers and partners working through the practical demands of modern data centers, AI infrastructure, and client computing.

This year, no topic is generating more urgency than AI. Over the past year, discussions of artificial intelligence have moved from pilots and proofs of concept towards practical deployments. The age of open-ended AI experimentation is giving way to a more demanding phase of AI execution, where organizations need systems they can deploy, secure, manage, and scale. AMD and Dell have invested years in building the compute foundation behind these requirements, and we’ll share more details at speaker sessions, demos, and client breakouts throughout the show.

Visit AMD at Booth 827

At Booth 827, AMD will showcase enterprise solutions built for the practical demands of AI deployment, from commercial PCs and workstations to data center infrastructure. Battery life, performance, efficiency, security, and manageability are just as important as they ever were, and AI adds an additional level of complexity to the conversation. Our demos and discussions will focus less on spec-sheet comparisons and more on the queries we hear from customers regarding where AI should run, how it should be secured, what it will cost at scale, and how it fits into existing fleet management plans.

Throughout the show, AMD executives and technical experts will lead breakout sessions focused on these questions. Rahul Tikoo, AMD Senior Vice President and GM of the Client Business Unit, will host Deploy with Confidence: AMD AI Solutions for Modern Commercial Environments on Wednesday, May 20 from 8:30 – 9:30 AM. The session will explore how enterprise clients are balancing performance, scale, and efficiency across their fleets. AMD will also host dedicated sessions on how the AMD EPYC server processor portfolio address today’s power and space constraints and how AMD Instinct™ MI350 Series GPUs support generative AI at scale. 

Dell Pro 7 featuring AMD Ryzen AI processors in easel mode.
Dell Pro 7 featuring AMD Ryzen™ AI processors, shown in easel mode.

One point we hear consistently from customers and enterprise partners is that AI does not fit a single deployment model. Cloud-based AI is widely available, but its costs can climb quickly when usage expands across dozens or hundreds of seats. Local AI can reduce latency, improve data control, and lower some usage costs, but it may not be the right fit for the largest or most complex workloads. Generative AI’s capabilities are more familiar to the public but it lacks the sophistication and functionality of task-completing agentic systems. Agentic AI may revolutionize how we interact with PCs once fully mature – certainly its demonstrated ability to rewrite user expectations while immature speaks to tremendous long-term potential – but only once cost and security concerns can be properly addressed. 

Matching the Right Compute to the Right Workload

No single CPU, GPU, or integrated neural processing unit can address every AI deployment need; AI workloads and customer needs both vary too widely for one architecture to cover every scenario. Training, inference, edge deployment, workstation development, and commercial client workloads each place different demands on hardware and software. Strong enterprise AI deployments require a heterogeneous ecosystem that can match the right compute engine to the right workload.

AMD is built for this type of environment. AMD EPYC™ server CPUs, Pensando DPUs, AMD Instinct GPUs, and AMD Ryzen™ AI PRO processors support core enterprise infrastructure, AI acceleration, and commercial client systems. AMD Ryzen Threadripper™ PRO CPUs, and AMD Ryzen AI Max PRO processors extend that portfolio into specialized environments where memory capacity, energy efficiency, and high-performance compute matter most.

Dell Pro 7 with an AMD Ryzen AI PRO processor in clamshell mode.
Dell Pro 7 featuring AMD Ryzen™ AI processors, in traditional clamshell mode.

AMD PRO processors also include hardware-based security and manageability features designed to help IT teams protect AI-enabled systems and manage commercial fleets, both in-band and out of it. 5th Gen AMD EPYC server processors and AMD Ryzen Threadripper PRO workstation processors provide AVX-512 support for AI workloads, along with the cores, clocks, and memory capacity needed for scientific computing, rendering, virtualization, and other demanding enterprise workloads.

The new and refreshed Dell systems AMD will showcase at Dell Technologies World expand the Dell and AMD commercial portfolio across mobile workstations, premium commercial PCs, and advanced enterprise systems.

From workstations like the new Dell Pro Precision 5S 14” and 16”, to the updated Dell Pro Max 16, to the new Dell Pro 3 and Pro 7, thinner, lighter systems based on AMD Ryzen AI PRO 400 Series processors give Dell commercial customers more choice across professional systems with hardware-backed security, integrated NPUs for emerging AI PC workloads, and more efficient, lighter designs.

Conclusion

The advent of AI has sent ripples through the once-staid commercial computing market, but early uncertainty can’t be allowed to crystallize into avoidance if companies are to take full advantage of what AI has to offer. So stop by Booth 827. Bring us your toughest workload questions. Then, if you want to see where things are headed next, join us for Advancing AI Day from July 22-23 where Dr. Lisa Su, and the AMD executive team will share more details on where we’re headed next.

See you on the show floor.  

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