Kingston HyperX Fury HX426C15FBK4/32 4x8GB DDR4 RAM Review

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APH Networks checked out the Kingston HyperX Fury HX426C15FBK4/32 4x8GB DDR4 RAM A quote from the article:
In the middle of last week, I had a chance to meet the Leader of the Official Opposition in Alberta, Brian Jean from the Wildrose Party. "I heard you are pretty important," I joked as I began the conversation. "No, I am not, really," he replied in a genuine tone and a warm smile. Later on, I started a conversation with a guy who introduced himself as "Derek". It was not until I got home that night that I realized he was actually Derek Fildebrandt, MLA for Strathmore-Brooks and Shadow Minister of Finance. More often than not, we associate importance with grand displays of power (Sort of like the guy with funny hair in the Republican presidential primaries), when in reality importance is intrinsic to your position, and not how loud and obnoxious you can be. Simply put, it is possible to be important and understated at the same time. In the past, we have covered components that looks fast and performs poorly, looks subtle but goes like heck, and everything in between. Today, we will take a look at the Kingston HyperX Fury HX426C15FBK4/32 4x8GB DDR4 RAM. After closing off with our last DDR3 review in late August with the Silicon Power Xpower PC3-19200 2x8GB dual channel kit, this marks the beginning of series of DDR4 RAM review on the Intel Skylake platform. Equipped with black low profile heatspreaders for very subtle appearance, how will Kingston's massive capacity DDR4-2666 kit compare against the competition? We took one in, and ran it against the latest entries from G.Skill and Patriot to find out.
 Kingston HyperX Fury HX426C15FBK4/32 4x8GB DDR4 RAM Review @ APH Networks