A Tour Of The Kingston Memory Factory In Taiwan
News
By Marcus Yam
published Have you ever wondered how memory modules are made? Kingston invited us to its factory in Taiwan, a small detour from our Computex coverage. The company gave us a look around at how its memory modules and USB drives are manufactured.
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The final product, before it gets tested.
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The computer that tells the machines what to do.
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Heavy machinery.
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It's break time!
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Just one of the memory testbeds.
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A worker swapping out memory from the testbeds.
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Lots of testing goes on here, as you can see.
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The Auto SPD machine.
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RAM gets the pass or fail.
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Same thing happens for laptops.
Marcus Yam served as Tom's Hardware News Director during 2008-2014. He entered tech media in the late 90s and fondly remembers the days when an overclocked Celeron 300A and Voodoo2 SLI comprised a gaming rig with the ultimate street cred.
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28 Comments
Comment from the forums
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xaira the computer that tells the machines what to do in my fav memory factory is running windows, coincidence, i think not, score 2 for windows: )Reply -
sliem Lol @ pic15 "It's break time!"Reply
should say "I'm sooooooooo tired, zzzzzzzz"
or "Why did I buy an iPad? Whyyyyyyyyyy /cry" -
duk3 Cool pictures.Reply
Could you please just put 10-15 of them on one page so I don't have to click through 44 pages? -
requiemsallure pic 21 seems like the fail rate is kinda high, i wonder if they reuse the chips that fail somehow, like in cpu's and gpu'sReply -
This has to be one of the least informative collections of pictures I have ever seen. After clicking through I still have no idea what the manufacturing process is (would it have made sense to present it from beginning to end?) All I have learned is that there is production (apparently the machines give birth to memory modules), testing (apparently the modules are put in test machines. But what sort of test is run?). And then there is packaging. Fascinating. Please tell me that Kingston forced you to scramble to pictures into a disorganised jumble and make random useless comments for the captions, without actually showing anything interesting.Reply
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enzo matrix duk3Cool pictures.Could you please just put 10-15 of them on one page so I don't have to click through 44 pages?Indeed. Once I realize an article is a picture slideshow on toms, I don't even bother reading it. Guess I missed out this time too.Reply