
Kingston has expanded its product portfolio with the introduction of the FURY Renegade Pro DDR5 RDIMM with Heat Spreader, IronKey Locker+ 50 G2 USB flash drive, and a new 30.72TB capacity option for the DC3000ME Gen5 U.2 NVMe SSD.
Latest Kingston Enterprise-Focused Additions


The Kingston FURY Renegade Pro DDR5 RDIMM is designed for workstations and HEDTs supporting Intel XMP and AMD EXPO overclocking; the modules are available in speeds ranging from 5600MT/s to 7600MT/s and capacities from 16GB to 256GB. Particularly, models operating at 7200MT/s and above will include updated aluminum heat spreaders for improved thermal dissipation under sustained workloads, as these overclocked modules carry higher voltages (and by extension, heat). The memory modules also support overclocking with ECC functionality.

Kingston also introduced the IronKey Locker+ 50 G2 USB flash drive, a hardware-encrypted storage device featuring AES 256-bit XTS encryption certified under FIPS 197 standard. The drive includes digitally signed firmware protections against BadUSB attacks and safeguards against brute-force login attempts, plus separate administrator and user passwords with configurable complexity options. Additional security features include crypto-erase functionality, a virtual keyboard for password entry, and an anti-fingerprint coating. The drive is compatible with Windows and macOS, no additional software required.

The Kingston DC3000ME Gen5 U.2 NVMe SSD now includes a new 30.72TB model, expanding the drive’s capacity range from 3.84TB to 30.72TB. The SSD uses a PCIe 5.0 NVMe interface and supports sequential read speeds of up to 14GB/s alongside random read performance of up to 2.8 million IOPS. As a datacenter-focused model, DC3000ME uses 3D eTLC NAND memory and includes onboard power loss protection, AES 256-bit encryption, and TCG Opal 2.0 self-encrypting drive support.
Pokdepinion: If ECC hasn’t appeared in CUDIMMs yet, that might be the next step for HEDTs.
