Posts Tagged ‘Lodging Options’
Most helpful customer reviews 586 of 596 people found the following review helpful. I benchmarked the Kingston DT101 G2 flash drive as soon as I received it. The initial result I got, using the free “Flash Memory Toolkit” program, was not very impressive. It shows that for smaller files of 1-5MB, the write speed is only 5.7 – 6.2MB/s (see the Image section for screenshot). In contrast, the Transcend 16 GB JetFlash 500 was able to achieve higher speed of 6.8MB/s (for 1MB file) to 11.3MB/s (for 5MB file). For transferring very large files, however, this Kingston drive really shines. I benchmarked its read/write speed using 1GB video files, and was able to achieve up to 11.4MB/s in write, and 20.2MB/s in read. This is over twice as fast as its rated speed, which claims just 5MB/s write and 10MB/s read. In contrast, the Transcend drive only achieved 7.5MB/s in write and 13.4MB/s in read, under the same test conditions. In summary, the Kingston DT101 G2 flash drive may not be suitable for tasks which require frequent read/write of smaller files, such as using it for daily backup or as a ‘ReadyBoost’ device. But for transferring large chunk of data, such as storing temporary video files for playback on my WD TV Live Media Player, it performs the job really well. I consider this product a very good value, especially at its present low cost of just $1.60 per GB. Some additional notes: - The capacity for this Kingston ’32GB’ flash drive, as reported by my computer, is 29.7GB. Note that this is actually normal, because 1GB to computer people means 2 to the power of 30, which is about 7.4% greater than 1 billion. So 29.7GB translates to approximately 32,000,000,000 bytes, which means ’32GB’ according to marketing people. - This Kingston flash drive came pre-loaded with ‘urDrive’ software, similar to the infamous ‘U3′ software for previous generations of Sandisk flash drives. I have no intention to use urDrive, so I renamed the ‘Autorun.inf’ file (found on the root directory) to ‘Autorun._inf’. That way, I don’t have to be bothered by it ever again – but it is still available in case I changed my mind. - The drive is pre-formated in FAT32 file system for maximum compatibility. That means its largest file size is limited to 4GB. If you need to transfer files larger than 4GB, you have to reformat this drive to NTFS. Be warned that doing so wipes out all existing files, including urDrive. 275 of 287 people found the following review helpful. Because I use them so often, it’s hard to get excited over a new USB drive unless it has something new or innovative about the design. I’m not excited about this drive. I had an immediate positive reaction to a USB drive with a similar design concept: a small footprint drive with a swinging metal shield. But where the PNY Micro Swivel Attache perfected the swivel design in a tiny 4GB drive, and the HP v115w Flash Drive did the same in a 16GB model, the Datatraveler made a larger, less elegant cover that can hardly be given that name. It is a good drive, in that it’s an excellent price and performs well. There is an activity light that flashes as the drive is being accessed. I don’t use the Kingston app, but instead installed PortableApps on it, which works like a charm. But the cover is about useless, providing little if any protection if you were to place the drive in a briefcase, backpack, pocket or drawer. It’s loose and swings freely, never staying in place and offering virtually no protection. If you plug this thing in, and hardly ever remove it, except to plug it right in to another computer, then this is probably not going to trouble you. If you wear your USB on a lanyard, it will also not be too much of an issue, since the lanyard will attach at the cap, and gravity will keep it in place. The price is excellent, but if you need a more rugged drive that travels well, get one that has a better fitting cover design. 205 of 220 people found the following review helpful. Briefly, this is what it’s worth knowing about this item: - I can’t see that I’ve had a big problem with losing caps but the ‘capless’ design is quite innovative and it does not hurt. When it comes to Kingston – and, over the years and as prices were falling and the capacity grew, I’ve bought their 2GB, 4GB, 8GB and now the 16GBs – they never let me down. I don’t believe I’ve lost one bit of data so far and, affordable as they are, I can make multiple copy of the data I can’t afford to lose and keep it stored at different locations. Considering price and reliability, this is a well-deserved 5-star. |


