Wednesday, May 31st 2023
Kingston Brings XS1000 External SSD and Non-Binary DDR5 to Computex 2023
Kingston was thrilled to be back at Computex to showcase some of its new and upcoming products, including the new XS1000 External SSD and some of its new and current Fury DDR5 memory modules and kits. In addition to these new products, Kingston also showcased its dedication to enterprise and server market with DC600M enterprise SSD, industrial SD cards, and Server Premier DDR5 memory, as well as its focus on both creators, gamers, and those on the move, with the Fury DDR5 memory, Fury Renegade SSDs, the new DT microDuo and DTMax flash drives, SD and microSD cards, and more.
To be available in Q3 2023, the Kingston XS1000 External SSD aims to bring pocket-sized portability without compromising the performance. It will be available in 1 TB and 2 TB capacities, have USB 3.2 Gen 2 interface, and peak at 1000 MB/s read and write sequential performance. Kingston is also announcing an updated Fury Renegade DDR5 RGB memory lineup, which will be available in 16 GB to 48 GB capacities, bringing non-binary kits, and ranging from 6000 to 7200 MT/s. In addition, there is also the FURY Renegade PCIe 4.0 M.2 SSD, coming in capacities of up to 4 TB and reaching sequential read and write performance of up to 7,300 and 7,000 MB/s, respectively.
To be available in Q3 2023, the Kingston XS1000 External SSD aims to bring pocket-sized portability without compromising the performance. It will be available in 1 TB and 2 TB capacities, have USB 3.2 Gen 2 interface, and peak at 1000 MB/s read and write sequential performance. Kingston is also announcing an updated Fury Renegade DDR5 RGB memory lineup, which will be available in 16 GB to 48 GB capacities, bringing non-binary kits, and ranging from 6000 to 7200 MT/s. In addition, there is also the FURY Renegade PCIe 4.0 M.2 SSD, coming in capacities of up to 4 TB and reaching sequential read and write performance of up to 7,300 and 7,000 MB/s, respectively.
8 Comments on Kingston Brings XS1000 External SSD and Non-Binary DDR5 to Computex 2023
Or is Ram just the next frontier for the gen Z pronoun/identity crisis nonsense now or what ?
Binary kits would be regular sizes like 16gb, 32gb, 64gb etc..
Installing such kits require a BIOS update for most motherboards.
I agree that the naming is confusing though
I think I remember reading about those back in 2020
That's only part of the answer though, I don't know why they can't put twice as many dies on a module. Would stacking be too costly, or is it simply impossible to connect two dies to the same wires in a UDIMM?
the KC3000 pretty much does that now.
how about a 4TB KC3000 for $300 CAD and an 8TB one for $550 CAD. :)
Edit- also I never understood the gaming tag attached to top end nvme drives when reviews show load times basically the same with a sata drive?