Patriot Memory

Patriot Memory
LLC
Industry Storage devices
Founded 1985 (1985) as PDP Systems Inc
Founders Paul Jones, Douglas Diggs and Phil Young
Headquarters 47027 Bericia St.
Fremont, California 94538
, United States
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Paul Jones (CEO)
Douglass Diggs (President/Chairman)
Phil Young (CFO/COO)
Products Memory cards
USB flash drives
Memory modules
Solid-state drives
PC Gaming peripherals
Brands BURST
EP PRO
EP
FLARE
GAUNTLET
INSTAMOBILE
LX
SINGE
V30
VIPER GAMING
Website patriotmemory.com

Patriot Memory is an American designer and manufacturer of PC based USB flash drives, memory modules, solid state drives and gaming peripherals.[1] Patriot Memory is based in Silicon Valley and designs, develops, manufactures and assembles computer components locally.[2]

History

PDP Systems was founded in 1985 and named after its founders Paul Jones, Doug Diggs and Phil Young. Jones, Diggs, and Young were high school classmates at Awalt High School in Mountain View, CA. Jones and Young went on to UC Davis, while Diggs graduated from the University of California at Los Angeles. PDP Systems started during Jones's time as a student at UC Davis as an OEM builder of computer memory chips into DRAM modules for many of the major PC manufacturers.

Starting in 2003 PDP Systems released their own branded Patriot Memory line of DDR SDRAM to be sold in the retail and online market. Unlike the SDRAM manufacturers that released their SDRAM as bare modules, the Patriot Memory modules featured a bladed metal heat shielding across the entire DDR module.[3] Patriot Memory continued the use of full module heat sinks across each generation of DDR generations to include DDR4.

The Patriot Memory brand eventually became the company name. Patriot Memory has two assembly lines at their facilities in Fremont, California, and Taipei, Taiwan. Jones credits keeping manufacturing in the US as a result of having highly automated machines and reduced shipping costs.[4] Patriot continues to evolve their legendary "VIPER" brand of memory modules, accessories (keyboards, mice, headsets, headset stands, mousepads, and usb flash drives), and "BURST" solid state drives.

References

Further reading

  • Jacobi, Jon L. (July 3, 2013). "Review: The Patriot Aero streams media without wires—not even a power cable". PC World. Retrieved September 26, 2017.
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