Photo Essay: Kingston At Computex 2025

Kingston is and always has been a mainstay at Computex 2025. This year, the memory maker gave us a brief tour of its achievements, as well as some new products we can expect.

Perhaps one of the brand’s proudest achievements was how much its products was being used in the AI and more specifically, the robotics sector. Kingston actually had a self-driving robot in one of the rooms, and was co-developed with Taiwan Intelligent Robotics Co (TIRC). Sadly, the robot had to remain static but to be fair, there wasn’t really a whole lot of room for it to manoeuvre in. In the same room, Kingston also showed off their enterprise product line very briefly.

In the next room, the memory maker also showed off a 3D-printed rocket that was made by local university students, all of whom designed it using the brand’s memory products (obviously).

Expectedly, Kingston also showed off its new Fury G5 PCIe 5.0 SSD. The storage component had launched earlier this month and we reported on it, and you can expect a review to be posted soon.

Kingston also showed off its second generation CAMM2 memory module, something that I’ve personally been seeing around the halls of Computex 2025. It’s been proven to work but ironically, the memory standard currently and only works with specially designed Intel chipset boards, such as the Gigabyte Aorus Z890 Tachyon Ice. For that matter, motherboard makers do not seem to be pushing for the adoption of this standard as hard, a sentiment which was shared by one of the brand’s representatives that I spoke to.

Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter or Telegram for more updates and breaking news. 



Source link

Comments (0)
Add Comment