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Microsoft Copilot for Business: What It Does and Is It Worth It?
5 Jan, 2026







£387.29 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
For £324.52 ex-VAT, the Kingston FURY Renegade G5 1TB M.2 NVMe is a decent “no-drama” upgrade for office machines and workstations that need a fast, reliable system/boot drive without paying for the very top-tier flagships. Kingston’s generally solid on endurance and warranty support, and this line tends to behave well in day-to-day real-world workloads—uploads, document/VM storage, general multitasking—where you actually feel the responsiveness more than you’ll ever chase benchmark numbers.
That said, I wouldn’t call it an obvious slam-dunk if you’re building for sustained heavy writes (large video renders, constant database churn, long-running VM farms) and you don’t have cooling or a heatsink in place. Gen4-class drives can run hot, and performance can dip if the drive can’t keep cool. If your budget is tight, it’s worth comparing against cheaper 1TB NVMe options at the same time—if those are close in practical performance for your use case, the Renegade becomes harder to justify.
**Buy it if:** you want a reliable, fast internal NVMe for a UK business PC/laptop replacement cycle, with peace of mind and strong everyday performance. **Skip it (or shop around) if:** your workload is write-heavy and continuous, or you can’t guarantee cooling—then you may get better value by targeting a drive with a proven track record for sustained throughput at your exact price point.

Samsung
Samsung 990 EVO Plus MZ-V9S2T0 - SSD - encrypted - 4 TB - internal - M.2 2280 - PCIe 5.0 x2 (NVMe) - 256-bit AES - TCG Opal Encryption 2.0

Kingston
Kingston Data Center DC2000B - SSD - Enterprise - 960 GB - internal - M.2 2280 - PCIe 4.0 x4 (NVMe)

Dell
Dell - Customer Kit - SSD - Read Intensive - 1.92 TB - hot-swap - 2.5" - SAS 24Gb/s

Kingston
Kingston DC3000ME - SSD - Enterprise - encrypted - 7.68 TB - internal - 2.5" - U.2 PCIe 5.0 x4 (NVMe) - 256-bit AES - TCG Opal Encryption 2.0