It's going to take people a long time to fill up Corsair's new USB flash drive. The water-resistant Flash Voyager drive has been upgraded and now can carry up to 16 GB of data. Users can even store a full Windows operating system and boot off the drive. Read more
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Tom's Hardware UK and Ireland Forums »
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High-Security Flash Storage: Corsair's Survivor 32-GB USB Drive
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Thread : High-Security Flash Storage: Corsair's Survivor 32-GB USB Drive
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Profile: member
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It's not the fastest, sleekest or smallest USB drive, but Corsair's Survivor offers 32 GB of capacity, security features and a waterproof design.
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Related Product
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Go to www.hartsbatteries.com
Profile: enthusiast
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Does anyone know how fast usb 3.0 will be? Maybe if they make thumb drives this size on a full 3.0 bus we could start using thumbs for swapfile ? |
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Profile: stranger
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I wish more manufactures would implement a physical write protect switch on these flash drives. I know they exist but why are they not more prevalent? It seems we take 2 steps forward and 1 step back sometimes.
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Profile: journeyman
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If you right click on a file name from the directory, you can go to properties and select "Read Only" or you can make a file almost permanent by writing it to CD or by making multiple backups.
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Message edited by chuckt on 04-04-2008 at 07:32:13 PM |
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Profile: journeyman
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I really don't see the purpose of this device. I think it's just a gimmick meant to vacuum a few xtra $$$ out of your wallet.
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Profile: stranger
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Profile: journeyman
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Write your files to CD or DVD because viruses can't touch Read Only Memory which are CD or DVD backups. If you get a virus, you can easily get back to the uninfected files if you have enough clean backups. |
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Profile: stranger
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Then I lose portability. Chuck thanks for your advise but you are missing the point altogether.
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Profile: stranger
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Profile: journeyman
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You may lose portability but you can have backups since I bought a 512 Megabyte thumbdrive at Five Below which isn't the best price because you can buy 1 GB thumbdrives for about $7 to $8 dollars.
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Profile: journeyman
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I found a solution. I have a 2GB SD card from Lexar that has a write protect switch and all you need is a card reader to put it into that is small enough for portability. They aren't hard to find but removing them may be difficult and you shouldn't put pressure on the side that has the smallest width.
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Profile: journeyman
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I was actually thinking of size when I saw this Kingston 2GB MicroSD Flash Card + Reader Model FCR-MRR+SDC/2GB:
Message edited by chuckt on 04-22-2008 at 11:38:24 AM |
Tom's Hardware UK and Ireland Forums »
Storage
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Flash Media »
High-Security Flash Storage: Corsair's Survivor 32-GB USB Drive
