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‹ The template below (Expand) is being considered for deletion. See templates for deletion to help reach a consensus. › Kingston Technology Co. is an American producer of memory products. It is located in Fountain Valley, California with manufacturing and logistics facilities in the United States, United Kingdom, Ireland, Malaysia, China, and Taiwan. Image File history File links This is a lossless scalable vector image. ...
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For the album by the Kaiser Chiefs see Employment (album) Employment is a contract between two parties, one being the employer and the other being the employee. ...
A website (alternatively, Web site or web site) is a collection of Web pages, images, videos and other digital assets that is hosted on a Web server, usually accessible via the Internet or a LAN. A Web page is a document, typically written in HTML, that is almost always accessible...
Location of Fountain Valley within Orange County, California. ...
It is the largest independent producer of DRAM Memory Modules, currently owning over 16% of worldwide module market share. Kingston is arguably the second largest supplier of Flash memory. Kingston's actual market share is closer to 27% but iSuppli does not include Kingston OEM revenues in their new analytical formula. Dram can mean several things: For the imperial unit of volume see dram (unit), commonly used to describe a measure of Scotch whisky For the imperial unit of weight or mass see avoirdupois and apothecaries system (of mass) For the Armenian monetary unit see dram (currency) DRAM is a type...
Kingston Technology had 2,400 employees in 2004. Sales in 2005 exceeded $3 billion USD for the first time. History
Kingston Technology grew out of a severe shortage of surface-mount memory chips in the high-tech marketplace in the 1980s. John Tu and David Sun were determined to find a solution. They put their engineering expertise to work and designed a new Single In-Line Memory Module (SIMM) that used readily available, older technology through-hole components. A new industry standard was born — and, on October 17, 1987, so was Kingston Technology. Image File history File links Information. ...
Prose is writing distinguished from poetry by its greater variety of rhythm and its closer resemblance to the patterns of everyday [[speech. ...
1900s 1988 Kingston receives a patent for a single in-line memory module (SIMM) for memory expansion in a computer system. The SIMM includes a plurality of memory chips surface-mounted on a printed circuit board. 1989 Kingston differentiates itself from its competitors with 100-percent testing, resulting in quality assurance and the leadership position in the market. 1990 Kingston branches out into its first non-memory product line, processor upgrades. 1992 Kingston is ranked #1 by Inc. magazine as the fastest-growing privately held company in America. 1993 Kingston expands into networking and storage product lines. 1994 Kingston introduces DataTraveler® and DataPak™ portable products. In September, Kingston becomes ISO 9000 certified on its first assessment attempt. Forbes magazine lists Kingston as number 367 on its list of “The 500 Largest Private Companies in the U.S.” Kingston is listed with revenue of $489 million. 1995 Kingston opens a branch office in Munich, Germany to provide technical support and marketing capabilities for its European distributors and customers. In October, Kingston joins the Billion-Dollar Club. The company’s 1995 sales exceed $1.3 billion. Ads ran thanking the employees (“Thanks a Billion!”) with each individual employee name in the Wall Street Journal, Orange County Register and Los Angeles Times. Ads ran thanking the suppliers and distributors in trade publications and the Wall Street Journal 1996 On August 15, SoftBank Corporation of Japan acquires 80 percent of Kingston for a total of $1.5 billion. In November, Kingston and Toshiba co-Market memory upgrades for Toshiba PCs. This is the first time a PC OEM and a memory manufacturer team up. On December 14, John Tu and David Sun allocate $100 million for employee bonuses as a result of the acquisition. Kingston announces a 49% increase in unit sales for its memory module products in calendar year 1996 over calendar year 1995. SoftBank Corp. ...
1997 In January, Kingston opens its European headquarters in the United Kingdom. Kingston opens manufacturing facility/office in Taiwan. Kingston opens sales office in Japan. In August, Kingston opens manufacturing facility and offices in Dublin, Ireland. 1998 Kingston ranked #2 by Fortune Magazine of the "100 Best Companies to Work for in the United States" Kingston expands manufacturing capacity by purchasing PC-OEM manufacturing buildings in Fountain Valley, CA. In February, the Quality Management Systems of Kingston Technology were assessed and registered as meeting the requirements of ISO 9001/ANSI/ASQC Q9001 for quality standards by SGS International Certification Services. 1999 In July, John Tu and David Sun buy back the 80 percent of Kingston owned by Softbank for $450 million. Kingston introduces ValueRAM® a high-quality, low-cost memory designed for system integrators to use in white box solutions. In September, Kingston opens manufacturing facility in Penang, Malaysia.
2000s 2000 Kingston launches Advanced Validation Labs, Inc. (AVL), a sister company that provides memory validation services. Kingston’s Storage Products Division (SPD) is spun off as a new company, StorCase® Technology, Inc. In June, Kingston announces a new supply chain management model to its memory manufacturing process. Payton Technology Inc. is established to help support this new model. Forbes magazine lists Kingston as number 141 on its list of “The 500 Largest Private Companies in the U.S.” Kingston is listed with revenues of $1.5 billion for 1999. 2001 In March, Kingston announces the formation of the Consumer Markets Division (CMD), a new division focusing on the retail and e-tail channel. Kingston is honored by Industry Week as a "Top 5 Global Manufacturing Company" 2002 In January, Kingston makes Fortune’s list of “100 Best Companies to Work For” for the fifth year in a row. In July, Kingston launches patented, industry-leading memory tester. In November, Kingston launches new HyperX® line of high-performance memory modules. Kingston launches patented EPOC chip-stacking technology. 2003 In April, Kingston receives the “Diverse Supplier Award for Best Overall Performance” from Dell. In June, Kingston is honored for “Excellence in Fairness” by the Great Place to Work Institute. In August, Kingston makes a $50 million investment in Elpida. In October, Kingston launches “Green Initiative” for module manufacturing. 2004 Kingston announces revenues of $1.8B for 2003. iSuppli ranks Kingston as world's number-one memory module manufacturer for the third-party memory market. In August, Kingston increases Flash memory cards' warranty to "lifetime". In September, Kingston announces new DataTraveler Elite USB drives, with hardware-based security encryption. In October, AMD names Kingston "Outstanding Partner" for contributions to AMD Athlon 64 and Opteron launches. 2005 Kingston reports record-breaking revenues of $2.4B for 2004. iSuppli ranks Kingston as world's number-one memory module manufacturer for the third-party memory market for the second consecutive year. In May, Kingston launches line of validated ValueRam modules for Intel-based servers. In July, Kingston is granted a U.S. patent on dynamic burn-in tester for server memory. Kingston announces $26M investment in Tera Probe, the newest and largest wafer testing company in the world. In September, Kingston opens the world's largest memory module manufacturing facility in Shanghai, China. 2006 Kingston reports all-time high revenues of $3.0B for 2005. iSuppli ranks Kingston as world's number-one memory module manufacturer for the third-party memory market for the third consecutive year. In March, Kingston introduces first fully-secure 100% privacy USB drive with 128-bit hardware-based encryption, and later with 256-bit hardware encryption. In April, Kingston launched Fully-Buffered Dimms (FBDIMMs) breaking the 16GB barrier. In August, Kingston enters the portable media market with KPEX (Kingston Portable Entertainment eXperience). In September, Kingston receives Intel’s “Outstanding Supplier Award for Exceptional Support, Quality and Timely Delivery of FB-DIMM Products”. 2007 Kingston reports revenues of $3.7B for 2006, marking the highest revenues attained in its 20-year history. January 2007: Inc. Magazine honors Kingston Technology Founders with Inaugural Distinuished Alumni Goldhirsh Award. iSuppli ranks Kingston as world's number-one memory module manufacturer for the third-party memory market for the fourth consecutive year.
Products - Flash memory - Such as Secure Digital, Compact Flash, USB Flash Drives and various other form factors
- Computer - System Specific memory upgrades, ValueRam for system builders and OEMs
- Server - Memory for both branded (i.e. IBM, HP, etc) and non-branded white box servers
- Gamer - Hyper X
- Printer - LaserJet memory, Lexmark printer memory, etc
- Digital audio players - Mini-Secure Digital, Micro-Secure Digital, MMC
- Mobile phones - Mini-Secure Digital, Micro-Secure Digital, MMC
- MP3/Personal Entertainment Device - K-PEX 100
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Image File history File links Metadata Size of this preview: 712 Ã 600 pixelsFull resolution (880 Ã 741 pixel, file size: 176 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ...
A USB device for reading various kinds of flash memories, with a SD card plugged in Secure Digital (SD) is a flash (non-volatile) memory card format developed by Matsushita, SanDisk and Toshiba for use in portable devices, including digital cameras, handheld computers, PDAs and GPS units. ...
A gigabyte (derived from the SI prefix giga-) is a unit of information or computer storage equal to one billion (short scale) bytes or 230 bytes (1024 mebibytes)[1]. It is commonly abbreviated GB (not to be confused with Gb, which is used for gigabits). ...
A USB flash drive. ...
A USB device for reading various kinds of flash memories, with a SD card plugged in Secure Digital (SD) is a flash (non-volatile) memory card format developed by Matsushita, SanDisk and Toshiba for use in portable devices, including digital cameras, handheld computers, PDAs and GPS units. ...
The NASA Columbia Supercomputer. ...
This article or section does not cite any references or sources. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
This does not cite any references or sources. ...
Apple iPod, the most popular hard drive-based digital audio player An embedded hard drive-based player (Creative Zen Vision:M), one of the many alternatives for the iPod An MP3 CD player (Philips Expanium) Some mobile phones can be used as digital audio players, such as the Nokia 6233. ...
MPEG-1 Audio Layer 3, more commonly referred to as MP3, is a popular audio encoding format. ...
The K-Pex 100 (Kingston Portable Entertainment eXperience) is a portable media player produced by Kingston Technologies. ...
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