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Kingston @ COMPUTEX 2025: New consumer and industrial memory products, plus rocket science

Kingston @ COMPUTEX 2025: New consumer and industrial memory products, plus rocket science


Kingston showed up at COMPUTEX 2025, and it is not the usual “show and that’s it” approach – they clearly have something else going on, as the whole theme was “Kingston Powers Tomorrow”.

They broke it up into three main zones in what they called the Kingston Future City: the Intelligence Hub, the FURY Acceleration Center, and the Creators Lab. Each one gave a peek into how Kingston is tackling AI, gaming, and even aerospace.

In the Intelligence Hub, they had a GIGABYTE AI server rack packed with DC3000ME PCIe 5.0 NVMe SSDs and Server Premier DDR5 memory. These SSDs are blazing fast – we’re talking up to 14,000MB/s read speeds – and they’re tuned for super low latency and high IOPS.

Kingston @ COMPUTEX 2025: New consumer and industrial memory products, plus rocket science 1

Basically, ideal for real-time AI workloads. They even had a live demo with Taiwan Intelligent Robotics Company, where Kingston’s tech was powering inspection robots that gather and analyze data on the spot in high-risk environments. It was a great example of how their hardware isn’t just powerful, but also reliable, where it really matters.

Then, in the FURY Acceleration Center, they shifted gears to show what they’ve got for gamers and performance enthusiasts. The star here was the new FURY Renegade G5 SSD – PCIe 5.0 again – and it’s hitting speeds of up to 14,800MB/s read and 14,000MB/s write. That’s easily one of the fastest consumer drives around. They also showed off their FURY Renegade DDR5 CUDIMM running up to 8800MT/s, and the new FURY Impact DDR5 CAMM2 that can now scale to 128GB – great for high-end laptops and mobile workstations.

But the most jaw-dropping part? The Creators Lab. Kingston teamed up with the Rocket Technology Exploration Team (RTET) from NTUST and NFU to display actual aerospace hardware. They had a rocket on-site with a FURY Renegade G5 SSD embedded in its payload – that SSD was used to capture real-time flight data.

On the ground, an MSI desktop powered by the same SSD and FURY DDR5 handled flight simulation, while a server setup using DC3000ME and Server Premier DDR5 dealt with data crunching. They even included stuff for content creators – like the updated XS2000 external SSDs, a new DataTraveler Exodia S USB drive (up to 512GB), and revamped Canvas Plus SD and microSD cards with faster speeds.

For the spec nerds, here’s the quick rundown:

  • FURY Renegade G5 SSD: PCIe 5.0, up to 14,800MB/s read and 14,000MB/s write, up to 4TB
  • DC3000ME SSD: PCIe 5.0 U.2, up to 14,000MB/s read, 2.8M IOPS, up to 15.36TB
  • FURY Renegade DDR5 CUDIMM: Up to 8800MT/s, max 96GB
  • FURY Impact DDR5 CAMM2: Up to 128GB
  • DataTraveler Exodia S: USB 3.2 Gen1, max 512GB
  • Canvas Plus cards: Now faster, for both SD and microSD formats

All in all, Kingston didn’t just talk about the future at COMPUTEX – they showed what it looks like, whether it’s in an AI datacenter or halfway to space.


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