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Understanding RTO and RPO: Two Numbers Every Business Should Know
11 Mar, 2026







£241.78 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
Kingston’s Fury 16GB DDR4 kit is the kind of “boring, dependable” memory I like for the majority of UK business builds. If you’re upgrading a typical Intel/AMD desktop that supports DDR4, this should be plug-in friendly and give you the steady performance you’d expect for office work, light engineering, general IT lab use, and even day-to-day workstation multitasking. At ~£201 ex-VAT, the main question is whether you’re paying for capacity you actually need versus looking for a better value per GB from other reputable kits.
I’d say **buy it** if you want reliable DDR4 from a known brand, don’t want compatibility drama, and you’re building a small-to-medium business machine where uptime and “it just works” matter more than squeezing out the last bit of benchmark bragging. **I’d hesitate or shop around** if you’re comparing prices for the same platform and could get more capacity for similar money—because for most real-world business workloads, upgrading from “just enough” to “comfortably more” often beats chasing marginal speed/latency gains. If you tell me your CPU/motherboard model and what workloads you run (and whether it’s a single 16GB stick or a matched kit), I can sanity-check value properly.

Kingston
Kingston FURY Beast - DDR5 - kit - 64 GB: 2 x 32 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 6400 MHz / PC5-51200 - CL32 - 1.4 V - unbuffered - on-die ECC - black

Kingston
Kingston - DDR4 - module - 32 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 3200 MT/s / PC4-25600 - CL22 - 1.2 V - registered - ECC

Kingston
Kingston FURY Renegade RGB - DDR5 - kit - 96 GB: 2 x 48 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 6400 MT/s / PC5-51200 - CL32 - 1.4 V - unbuffered - on-die ECC - black & silver

Qnap
QNAP - DDR4 - module - 32 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 3200 MHz / PC4-25600 - ECC