Expo Preview: Intelligent World, Connected Hearts and Chips
From May 14 to 16, Hall 1 of Shenzhen Futian Convention and Exhibition Center will host a major industry event. The 2026 Global AI Terminal Expo (GAIE 2026) is about to open its doors, and Kingbrother Technology, under the theme "Intelligent World, Connected Hearts and Chips," will comprehensively display its IPDM (Integrated Product Design and Manufacturing) solutions at Booth 1C28, Hall 1.
Hardware Foundations, IPDM Ushering in a New Era of Intelligent Terminals—this is Kingbrother's core philosophy for this exhibition.
Unlike previous years, this year's expo features a dedicated "Embodied Intelligence and Humanoid Robotics" zone spanning 12,000 square meters. Kingbrother's booth is located in this core exhibition area, adjacent to several leading robotics manufacturers.
The floor plan reveals a clear signal: embodied intelligence is transitioning from the "technology demonstration" phase to the "industry matchmaking" phase, and hardware foundations will become the key to competition.

Kingbrother's Four Major IPDM Solutions to Debut
At Booth 1C28, Hall 1, Kingbrother will fully unlock its AI terminal IPDM solutions, presenting innovative achievements across four core domains:
Embodied Intelligence Robotics Solutions

Covering applications such as humanoid robots, industrial robots, and service robots, Kingbrother will showcase its main control boards and power boards on-site.
Take the head control board as an example. Using High-Density Interconnect (HDI) technology, it integrates the main processor, memory, and interface chips in limited space. A typical control board uses the STM32H723VGT6 as the main controller, with a triple power domain architecture separating digital, analog, and IO power supplies. Automotive-grade design standards ensure stability under vibration and temperature changes.
Joint driver boards require heavy copper processing to handle high currents driving motors. A drive solution centered on the MagnTek MT6835GT magnetic encoder needs triple protection—overcurrent, overheating, and short-circuit safeguards.
Data Center Solutions

Covering applications such as servers and AI computing clusters, displayed products include computing boards and core boards.
For AI computing needs, Kingbrother provides one-stop services from design to mass production. Its PCB capabilities cover 56-layer high-multilayer boards, 112Gbps high-speed signal integrity, 4.5/2.5mil fine line spacing, and other high-end specifications, meeting the stringent requirements of AI servers for high density and reliability.
Edge Inference Solutions

Covering edge terminal applications, displaying main control boards and display boards.
In the edge AI field, Kingbrother provides hardware solutions for various platforms from Jetson Orin to RK3588, supporting rapid prototype verification and mass production introduction.
Autonomous Driving and Automotive-Grade Solutions

Covering applications such as domain controllers and BMS batteries, displaying communication boards and core boards.
Kingbrother's automotive-grade PCB products meet AEC-Q200 standards, featuring high reliability and long lifespan characteristics, suitable for critical applications such as autonomous driving domain controllers and battery management systems.

Core Value of IPDM One-Stop Service
Kingbrother integrates product design and manufacturing IPDM, providing enterprises with one-stop services for product design, pilot verification, and mass production introduction.
According to industry data, adopting a mature IPDM model can increase modular reuse rates to 68%, achieve EMC pass rates of 98.5%, and compress mass production cycles to 60% of industry averages. These numbers mean one thing: hardware isn't simply soldering components together—it's a systems engineering discipline.
Kingbrother operates 7 innovation centers in Shenzhen, Beijing, Daya Bay, Hangzhou, Chengdu, Xi'an, and Tianjin, with 5 design centers and 4 manufacturing bases, serving over 20,000 customers. This footprint isn't random—it's a precise reading of the geographic code of supply chains.
"Our factory in Daya Bay is less than two hours by car from our Shenzhen R&D center," a Kingbrother supply chain director introduced. "This means design changes to sample validation can be completed within 24 hours."
This accumulation includes a DFM (Design for Manufacturability) rule database—Kingbrother's database contains 2,368 DFM rules covering everything from layout to soldering. It also includes a certified component library—3.27 million validated components ensuring supply chain stability.
This accumulated knowledge cannot be acquired by purchasing equipment. It comes only from time and project experience.

Expert Sharing: Exploring the Embodied Intelligence Ecosystem
During the expo, Kingbrother is invited to speak at the "Embodied Intelligence Ecosystem Conference."
Speech Topic: "Integrated Design and Manufacturing IPDM, Accelerating Embodied Intelligence Hardware Innovation and Deployment"
Speaker: Luo Jian, Vice General Manager of Kingbrother IPM Business Division
Speech Time: May 15, 15:55-16:10
Speech Location: Hall 1
This speech will focus on the core challenges of embodied intelligence hardware deployment. What separates building one working prototype from manufacturing one thousand consistent units?
The answer is: consistency.
Building one robot that runs in a lab versus mass-producing a thousand units with identical performance are completely different engineering challenges. PCB batch consistency, component supply chain stability, test coverage—these "boring" problems are the real bottlenecks of mass production.
"We've seen too many cases where the 'perfect prototype' in the lab becomes a 'problem product' in production due to batch variations," Luo Jian shared in advance. "There's no shortcut in hardware—only step-by-step accumulation."
The speech will also share Kingbrother's latest cases in the embodied intelligence robotics field, including cooperation experience with several leading robotics manufacturers, as well as practical insights from prototype to mass production.

Shenzhen's Foundation: Why Here?
The choice of Shenzhen for the Global AI Terminal Expo was no accident, and Kingbrother's decision to deeply cultivate here also has its profound meaning.
From the component markets of Huaqiangbei to the PCB manufacturing bases in Daya Bay, the Shenzhen region hosts the world's most complete electronics hardware supply chain. A hardware entrepreneur can complete the entire journey from chip selection to PCB prototyping in a single day—difficult to replicate anywhere else in the world.
But Shenzhen's advantages are being challenged. Southeast Asia offers lower manufacturing costs. India's talent pool is growing. Mexico provides proximity to North American markets. One investor attending the conference analyzed: "Shenzhen's core competitive advantage isn't cost—it's response speed and the density of engineering capability."
Kingbrother's 7 innovation center layout is the best interpretation of this density. From design to manufacturing, from prototype to mass production, Kingbrother can provide customers with end-to-end services, shortening product time-to-market and reducing development risks.

Conclusion: May 14, See You at Booth 1C28, Hall 1
From May 14 to 16, over 300 companies will gather at Shenzhen Futian Convention and Exhibition Center, bringing their latest technologies and products.
Kingbrother Technology sincerely invites you to visit Booth 1C28, Hall 1 to experience the four major IPDM solutions in person and learn about one-stop services from design to mass production.
Also, don't forget May 15 at 15:55 in Hall 1 to listen to Vice General Manager Luo Jian's wonderful speech, exploring the embodied intelligence ecosystem together.
The robots on display must eventually step out of exhibition halls and into factories and hospitals. When that happens, victory won't go to whoever built the "coolest-looking" robot—it will go to whoever built the hardware system that "runs most reliably."
The importance of hardware foundations may get overshadowed by the buzz around algorithms and applications during the expo. But when products actually deploy, it surfaces.
A serial entrepreneur posted on social media to warm up: "In robotics, the first half of the game is about who can build a demo. The second half is about who can build a product."
This May in Shenzhen may signal the beginning of the second half.
May 14, Booth 1C28, Hall 1, Shenzhen Futian Convention and Exhibition Center—Kingbrother looks forward to meeting you.