BANGKOK – TurnCloud kicked off its 2026 AI Empowerment Forum this week with a major announcement: the official launch of its TSpace core architecture. Marketed as "Tomorrow Space by TurnCloud," the new platform introduces an AI-native operating system called "AI-Optimized Space" designed to embed artificial intelligence directly into physical business environments.
According to the company, this launch signals a shift in enterprise tech strategy. Digital transformation is moving into what TurnCloud calls the "Physical Space Runtime" phase, where AI becomes part of a building's core infrastructure rather than just a software tool.
Global Tech Leaders Join to Explore AI Infrastructure
The forum convened key players from across the tech and commercial sectors, including Google Cloud, Delta Electronics, the Thailand IoT Association, National Electronics, TCC Technology, The Mall Group, and Siam Piwat. The group’s focus was to map out how AI can evolve from a productivity add-on into the backbone of enterprise operations, creating an interconnected network of smart spaces across industries and borders.
From ERP to AI OS: A Decade-Long Shift
Chi-Wen Liang, Chairman of TurnCloud Group, framed the announcement as a generational change in business management. "For the past ten years, companies relied on ERP to run processes and CRM to manage customers," Liang explained during his keynote. "Over the next decade, they will run their entire operational environment through an AI OS."
Liang pointed to Taiwan’s strong position in AI hardware and computing as a key advantage. He said TurnCloud aims to be a strategic implementation partner, bringing AI capabilities to real-world sectors like retail, corporate offices, healthcare, and residential developments.
T-Store Ecosystem Moves AI Into the Physical World
TurnCloud spokesperson Ting-Ting Chang detailed how the company is scaling its services. With AI applications maturing, TurnCloud is building its "T-Store" ecosystem to serve physical venues including offices, hotels, apartments, hospitals, and industrial parks.
"We already have multiple pilot projects running across different use cases," Chang said. "The main goal of TSpace is simple: take AI out of the data center and put it into the spaces where people live and work."
Two Major Product Debuts: The Pocket Company and TSpace360
The event featured two headline launches. First, TurnCloud and group venture Aquacrazy introduced "The Pocket Company." Chang described it as a new model for corporate structure, where competitiveness comes from human-AI team collaboration rather than headcount alone.
Through TSpace AI OS, a business can instantly deploy a team of digital AI agents—acting as CRM experts, strategy analysts, SEO advisors, ad consultants, or support reps. This creates an organization with its own memory and autonomous cross-functional abilities, giving companies 24/7 AI-driven productivity.
Second, the company upgraded its smart operations platform to TSpace360. The system unifies digital staff, real-time site data, internal knowledge bases, and AI decision engines. This allows physical spaces to anticipate needs, connect user scenarios in 360 degrees, and deliver automated services. For enterprises, it serves as a central hub for continuous improvement in user experience, efficiency, revenue, and sustainability.
Expansion Plans Focus on Southeast Asia Growth
On international strategy, Chang named Japan and Thailand as TurnCloud’s fastest-growing markets right now. The company also onboarded a new partner in the Philippines this year to expand its Southeast Asia footprint.
TurnCloud previously targeted over 40% of its revenue to come from overseas markets by 2025. Chang stated the goal for 2026 is to push that figure even higher.
