Post subject: Best flash drive
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Joined: 3/9/2004
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I've been looking to purchase a 64GB USB Flash Drive, but I'm seeing almost every single drive has mixed reviews, with a considerable percentage of users complaining about data loss. It's hard to determine what is causing the failures, if the drives are simply unreliable, if the complaining users store them in bad locations, or some other user error. Anyone have a good idea of which drives are reliable and which aren't at this size? Anyone know if the faster drives are more or less reliable? Anyone use a bunch of these frequently? I'd appreciate any feedback you may have.
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Kensington has the best reliability of all and they have a great warranty as well.
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Joined: 11/22/2004
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Go for the major brands, that's all I can really say. It's the cheaper brands that fail easily. A good USB drive that's properly used should last you up to 10 years. I bought this a while back, perfect for my 11" laptop and it contains 32GB despite its size.
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What would be considered the major brands in this area? Edit: Also, would any particular design be more durable than another? Cap? Slider? One piece?
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YoungJ1997lol
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Slider. I used a cap for a long time now, but slider is the best
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Tub
Joined: 6/25/2005
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If you want to carry it in the same pocket as your keys, or loosely dangling around in a bag (you know, fighting with the dust and sand that somehow always ends up populating the bottom), you don't want the usb port exposed. On the other hand, if you store it in your wallet in a suitable compartment, one of those mini-drives (e.g. super talent pico) will last just as long. Caps have a major architectural flaw: they tend to get lost, especially the smaller ones. Make sure no part of your stick can detach and wander off. Those fixed rotating caps are the next best thing, but they can easily come off if the stick isn't fixated when stored. But it's alright for storing in a briefcase or laptop bag that has these rubber bands for storing pens. IMHO sliders aren't worth their money. Sure, they're easy to use with the least amount of fumbling, but they don't offer much protection. Sand etc can still enter the connector. They do protect against snapping off the connector if there's tension, but unless you're very careless and/or a professional bear wrestler, such brute force should not happen. Plus, sliders tend to wear out when used often, making the whole thing an unstable mess. Can't comment on data safety, since I rarely actually use these things; I just carry them around in case I need them. Anything with a 5-year-warranty is a good thing, but nothing can free you from the burden of regular backups.
m00
Joined: 11/22/2004
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Location: Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Yeah, you should really only use these things for carrying around data that you regularly use, not for backup. Like, personally I have two 2TB hard drives that are strictly backup (well, also downloads, movies, music etc) and my USB keys only contain current projects that I'm working on, music and stuff I want to share with other people.
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Agreed with Tub and Dada on the use of thumb drives. They're the modern replacement for floppy drives, not a serious data storage system. And since you're transferring stuff over USB, having a huge drive isn't usually going to be that helpful (unless you have a USB 3.0 port and compatible drive) since the transfer times are going to get painful pretty quickly. I've been using a Kingston 4GB DataTraveler thumb drive for years and it's never given me trouble. The cap still stays on reliably, though I grant it just sits in my backpack when I'm not using it.
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I should clarify that I don't intend to use one of these as permanent storage. My use case is copy extremely large files from work and bring them home with me. I don't mind if I have to reformat the thing every couple of months. I do mind if it just stops working altogether after a couple of months. Which brands are the ones to look for? I saw Kensington and Verbatim mentioned above. Are there tiers of these devices?
Tub wrote:
IMHO sliders aren't worth their money. Sure, they're easy to use with the least amount of fumbling, but they don't offer much protection. Sand etc can still enter the connector. They do protect against snapping off the connector if there's tension, but unless you're very careless and/or a professional bear wrestler, such brute force should not happen.
You forgot "Teenage Girl". My sister when she was younger broke the connector off of several of these. She'd put it on her keychain, along with all sorts of useless stuff, such as a big plastic heart, a bear figure, a large marble with her name engraved on it and whatnot. She was gentle with it, but it didn't help that every time she plugged it in, it had relatively a large amount of weight hanging off of it.
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Joined: 2/26/2007
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I use Sandisk myself. I have never had a problem with data loss, at smaller data storage sizes, but I always click safely remove hardware when removing the stick. I did brick one USB stick when I unplugged it as the computer was shutting down. Do not unplug a USB stick when your computer is in the middle of shutting down.
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WST
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I had some very² bad USB disk a few years ago (lost data 2 or 3 times with it), but unfortunately, I do not remember it’s brand. All the other USB disks work way better for me.
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When it comes to flash memory it's all a gamble. Can work well for years, can fail of a sudden after a few weeks. Source: I've had tons of flash drives. Of all brands. The champion here is a 5 years old Kingston 2GB. It's still working but it fails when I try to use the whole space.
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Warepire
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I am using only Kingston for USB sticks since 6-7 years and I never had an issue yet with those. (I don't own any sticks over 4 GB though)
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BigBoct
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I've owned a SanDisk Cruzer Micro 512mb drive, which got lost, but worked flawlessly while I still had it. I also owned a PNY Attache 1gb drive, which decoupled itself from its' casing, then stopped working entirely a few weeks later. My current flash drive is a SanDisk Cruzer 4gb drive, which I've had no issues with since getting it.
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Just for reference, my current disks are SanDisk Cruzer Blade 8G and Transcend JetFlash 512M (bought maybe 10 years ago, but still usable)
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