Patriot introduces G2 Series AMD Edition memory kits
Patriot has introduced the new G2 Series, AMD Series Memory kits which are designed for AMD 9-series platforms. More details inside.


Patriot has introduced the new G2 Series, AMD Series Memory kits which are designed for AMD 9-series platforms. More details inside.
We received an interesting set of notebook memory in the mail recently. Kingston claims these HyperX Plug n Play modules will run at DDR3-1866 speed right out the box, so we decided to take them for a quick test drive...
This weekend, VR-Zone.com takes a quick look at one of Corsair's Vengeance dual-channel DDR3 memory kits, the CMZ8GX3M2A1600C9.
Kingston's 2133MHz HyperX SO-DIMM memory module is now Intel XMP-compatible. It is one of the fastest notebook memory modules in the market. More details inside.

Judging from the products line-up from AVEXIR at this year's COMPUTEX, it appears they are well endowned to be one of the leading memory players in the enthusiasts market along side with Taiwan based G.Skill, TeamGroup and GeIL. Later part of this year, they will focus on pushing their own brand memories instead where in the recent years, they have taken a more backstage approach by supplying modules to well-known memory brands. Read on to find out more.
Singapore based flash memory manufacturer Strontium were exhibiting their products at Computex Taipei 2011. More after the break!
VR-Zone gives a round up all the latest and greatest Memory, Storage and SSD products from Computex Taipei 2011.
*Constantly Updated*
Corsair has just announced the fastest 8GB PC memory kit to date, the Dominator GTX 8GB CMGTX7 kit. The kit is guaranteed to operate at 2400MHz, with latency settings of 9-11-10-30, at a memory voltage of 1.65V.
Available in 8Gb, 16Gb and 32Gb, the Memory Stick PRO-HG Duo HX memory cards from Sony have a maximum transfer rate of up to 50 Mb/s - the fastest in the world.
With quad-channel Sandy Bridge E on the horizon, triple-channel kits might soon be a thing of the past. Nevertheless, we decided to have a quick overclocking session with Kingston's HyperX T1 DDR3 triple-channel kit.
The idea of 'if it ain't broke, don't fix/change it' may sound great for users who do not take very kindly to the idea of junking away working electronic devices just because they are obsolete by today's standards, especially when one takes into consideration the amount of electronic waste produced today. And with smartphones being discarded like trash as soon as a new model is released, it is only prudent that someone would eventually step in to do something about it. Which is exactly what a design company has done with its concept design for a smartphone that features...wait for it...user-upgradeable hardware. Yep, you read that right.
How fast can a top-end notebook based off Intel's new Sandy Bridge platform run? Say, 3.2GHz under TurboBoost? Well, leave it to Origin to go off the charts with its latest lineup of factory-overclocked notebooks that are reportedly being sold with clock speeds of 4.5GHz, along with other major hardware goodies not found in most run-of-the-mill notebooks.
