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Here we are on Day 3 of COMPUTEX 2024, and our visit to Kingston was part of today’s agenda. Let’s take a look at what they have to offer.

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We started with the ‘Lighting FURY’ lineup, featuring the FURY Renegade DDR5 RGB and FURY Beast DDR5 RGB. While these are familiar models, there’s a new limited edition FURY Renegade with a stylish heatsink and a fresh coat of red paint. Guess what? Yep, it’s an F1-themed kit!

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Next, we saw the CAMM2 memory module. Unfortunately, it was only displayed soldered onto a sample motherboard, with no further details provided, particularly regarding exclusive Kingston features.

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The M.2 2280 FURY Renegade SSDs with PCIe 4.0 are also existing products in their lineup.

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For portable SSDs, the Swift XS series includes the standard XS1000 and the higher-speed XS2000. The “new” feature here is the XS1000’s new red color. That’s the update for this series.

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In the enterprise segment, Kingston showcased the Server Premier DDR5 ECC RAM with up to 96GB per stick and the 8TB SATA SSD.

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The USB sticks lineup sees the DataTraveler SE9 Gen 3 offering a read speed of 220MBps, the DataTraveler microDuo 3C features both USB-A and USB-C connectors for compatibility with legacy and modern systems and the DataTraveler Max has SSD specs in a USB stick form factor.

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For enhanced drive security, the Guardian IronKey provides dedicated data encryption, requiring users to enter a password on its touchscreen and keypad to access the drive. Additionally, the IronKey Vault Privacy 50 app offers an extra layer of software security.

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Kingston’s memory cards range from the high-end Canvas React Plus to the Canvas Go Plus and Canvas Select Plus, all available in microSD form as well.

As an exclusive reveal, Kingston teased an upcoming SSD called Kenting Bay. In collaboration with local university research teams, this SSD reportedly helps process data to improve car performance (yes, the actual F1 vehicle). We’ll see what it offers once it launches and is available for review.


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