Crucial unveils blazing fast T710 Gen5 SSD and massive 8TB X10 portable drive


Micron is making some serious noise at Computex 2025 with the launch of two new Crucial SSDs. The newly unveiled T710 Gen5 NVMe SSD and X10 Portable SSD offer the kind of speed and storage capacity that demanding users have been waiting for.
The T710 is an absolute beast. Crucial is claiming up to 14,900MB/s read speeds and 13,800MB/s write speeds, making it the fastest drive it’s ever released. Random performanceis off the charts, folks. We’re talking over 2 million IOPS. That kind of speed means faster game loading, snappier project rendering, and real-time responsiveness for complex tasks. There’s even an optional heatsink if you’re planning to push it hard.
MSI unveils new handhelds and laptops in massive Computex 2025 showcase


At Computex 2025, MSI definitely is not playing it safe. The company clearly came to Taipei ready to shake things up with fresh handheld gaming devices, artistic laptop designs, and a growing relationship with Mercedes-AMG. From lacquered laptops to performance-packed portables, MSI’s lineup is truly exciting.
The Prestige 13 AI+ Ukiyo-e Edition might be the most striking device on display. It features real Japanese Yamanaka lacquer, crafted in partnership with OKADAYA, and uses the famous “The Great Wave off Kanagawa” artwork as a design centerpiece.
ADATA launches TRUSTA brand to shake up the enterprise SSD market with fast storage for AI and servers


ADATA is moving beyond its usual consumer gear and entering the enterprise solid state drive market. The company today announced a new brand called TRUSTA -- this is ADATA going all-in on enterprise SSDs built for real-world AI, data center, and server demands.
The new TRUSTA lineup arrives with two series of SSDs: the high-performance T7 and the more efficiency-focused T5. These drives are built to handle heavy workloads like AI training, vector databases, virtualization, and server booting. That’s a pretty wide range, and ADATA’s clearly betting that TRUSTA can fill in the gaps for businesses trying to keep up with rising storage demands.