The ADATA XPG SX8000 gets an extra half star for its affordability alone. It’s not the fastest NVMe SSD we’ve tested, but it’s particularly adept at writing batches of small files, and it’s still two ...
Page 2: ADATA XPG Gammix S70 Blade SSD Review: More Benchmarks And The Verdict This past year was a tough one for PC enthusiasts. It was exceedingly difficult to acquire some of the most sought after ...
The Adata XPG Gammix S70 NVMe SSD (2TB) is a good SSD trapped under a huge and non-removable heat sink that may not fit in all systems. Wait for the new, removable heat sink design unless you’re sure ...
PC storage is a messy business at the moment, with no fewer than three different interfaces and four types of drives being used. If you can get your head around it, though, there's some great tech ...
As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases. TweakTown may also earn commissions from other affiliate partners at no extra cost to you. Affordable, power sipping, incredibly fast and ...
Page 2: ADATA XPG Atom 50: More Benchmarks, Gaming And The Verdict The NVMe M.2 solid state storage market continues to expand with an ever-increasing number of drives, at a variety of price points ...
As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases. TweakTown may also earn commissions from other affiliate partners at no extra cost to you. It seems like we hardly get MLC-based SATA SSDs ...
Adata proves that it’s not just big names like Samsung, Intel or Toshiba that can making incredibly fast NVMe M.2 drives. For gamers and professionals, this is an amazing upgrade, but it does come ...
Unlike the chonkiness of hard drives, the beauty of solid state drives (SSDs) is that they're small enough to fit just about anywhere. And in true CES fashion, XPG is now looking outside of your ...
Have you ever looked at your mouse and thought "it's fine, but kind of a big fat waste of space?" Gaming accessory company XPG apparently did, because it's just unveiled a concept mouse for CES 2022 ...
There aren’t many details for the Vault in XPG’s press release, but XPG says the “current prototype can integrate up to 1TB of Solid State memory running at 985MB/s” and connects with USB-C. Given ...