EXOL reshuffles as Vaughan Nankivell leaves Huawei role, signalling a strategic pivot to Australia's market over New Zealand.
Synnex New Zealand will celebrate its seventh birthday this week, with a party which will literally 'bring down the walls'.
Starting Aug 8 in NZ, the Kingston Wi-Drive debuts, offering iPhone and iPad users a lightweight solution to expand memory affordably.
Simms hits 3,000th order landmark in NZ, celebrating by gifting CodeBlue's milestone purchase for free. A sweet win for all involved.
Kingston FURY has unveiled a new look for its high-performance Renegade DDR4 memory products, sporting bold black heat spreaders.
Kingston's NV2 is a fast PCIe 4.0 NVMe M.2 solid-state data storage drive, ideal for laptops and small form-factor PCs.
It's possibly a bit extravagant, but with a distinctive look and RGB lighting, this RAM could be the icing on the cake for your PC gaming powerhouse.
Renegade, Beast, and Impact, are all designed for gamers who want fast systems, or those who want to indulge in a little overclocking.
Kingston's entry-level NV1 NVMe SSDs offer fast speeds and compact size for laptops and PCs. Prices start at NZ$100.
The extra edge being able to hear where your opponents are before you can see them can make the difference between a good kill or a respawn.
DC1000B is designed in a 2280 form factor that includes onboard power-loss protection and is engineered with 0.5DWPD endurance for extended service life.
HyperX unveils new gaming hardware for PC and PS4, including DDR4 memory kits for Alienware desktops and licensed headsets for console gamers.
Kingston's Server Premier modules are specifically engineered to take full advantage of AMD's latest eight-channel server microarchitecture.
Four Chinese OEMs—Huawei, Lenovo, BBK Electronics, and Xiaomi—have surged into the top 10 global semiconductor buyers, Gartner reveals.
SD-WAN is disrupting the enterprise wide area network market. Silver Peak's Doug Farndale looks at whether telcos should be scared - or excited.
Memory provider says the device is shipping now in 512GB capacity, representing the fastest USB 3.0 Flash drive in the Kingston family.
Apple's soldered-in RAM strategy fuels planned obsolescence, pushing consumers to newer models as upgradability fades, critics argue.
A new study reveals the underestimation of USB drive security risks by IT departments, exposing firms to significant data loss.
Simms has had a record-breaking year in New Zealand, fortifying its market presence with Dell, Motion, and Kingston, says GM Vaughan Nankivell.
Kingston hits record $6.5bn revenue; Simms reports surge in New Zealand, driven by demand for memory and flash products.