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Marvell's controller-only sales model means we don't see 88SS1074 controlled SSDs coming from small companies, ... Kingston's UV400 480GB SATA III SSD is one of the lowest cost SSDs on the market.
Kingston's HyperX Savage SATA III SSD is available in four capacities: 120GB, 240GB, 480GB and 960GB. Sequential compressible read performance for the HyperX Savage 240GB SSD is listed at 560MB/s.
The external Kingston XS2000 SSD works well enough, but doesn't quite reach its full speed potential on Mac because of ...
Kingston has a long line of storage options for about every usage you could have. Today I’m taking a look at the SSDnow M.2 SATA Solid State Drive with a capacity of 120GB. The M.2… ...
The HyperX is Kingston’s first SSD to utilize a SandForce controller, and as one might expect it is the SF-2281. It’s never a good idea to judge an SSD by its cover, but in this case the HyperX is ...
High-end SATA SSD shootout: Samsung 860 Pro vs. Kingston DC500M Kingston’s DC500M is a lesser-known drive but a great value for business. Jim Salter – Dec 9, 2020 6:30 am | 128 ...
Kingston A400 960GB SATA SSD for £37 from Amazon (sold by Ebuyer) This price works out so you're paying 3.85p per GB of storage, which is an insane price for solid state storage in any guise, let ...
We take a look at how Kingston's UV500 960GB 2.5-inch SATA-III hard drive stacks up against the competition in both gaming performance and price.
Kingston introduces the HyperX FURY SSD series. Coming in 120GB and 240GB sizes, these slim 2.5-inch SSDs (7mm thick) are equipped with MLC NAND Flash memory chips, a SATA 6.0 Gbps interface, a ...
But, in the context of network file serving, the DC600M shows that not only is SATA not dead but that it fills a specific niche in a way that NVMe and other SSD technologies don’t. Kingston ...
Get the Kingston A400 960GB SATA SSD for £47 from Amazon (was £65) In doing the maths, this works out to a price of 4.7p per GB of storage, which isn't bad at all, considering how SSD prices ...
Still, prices have come down for M.2 SSDs (both PCIe and SATA). As an added bonus, they're smaller and do not require any cabling. So there are still reasons to consider an M.2 drive over a 2.5 ...