USB Flash Memory suggestions

Alex Maynard amaynard-vQ8rsROW2HJSpjfjxSPG1fd9D2ou9A/h at public.gmane.org
Tue Jun 21 19:11:19 UTC 2005


Thanks very much to everyone for all the advice! I'm glad to hear
that these work easily with linux.  (I would have written back earlier
but was stuck at the dentist for several hours.)

Alex


On Tue, 21 Jun 2005, Henry Spencer wrote:

> On Tue, 21 Jun 2005, William O'Higgins wrote:
> > Flash memory is completely Linux-compatible.
>
> Perhaps not quite.  A while ago, I ran into a Verbatim flash key that made
> one particular Linux system hang during mount -- I never had a chance to
> investigate further (e.g., trying it on other systems) and find out what
> was going on.
>
> I've had no trouble with any others, though.
>
> One possibly-interesting brand is Kingmax.  I've done some light testing
> on them, with no problems; haven't used them heavily yet.  The feature of
> note on them is that they have a physical write-protect switch, which is
> sometimes a very useful thing.
>
> > If you leave the
> > formatting of the media as FAT16 or FAT32 (however you buy it) then it
> > will work on both Linux and Windoze.
>
> The only Windoze snag is that *old* versions of Windoze think they need a
> separate driver for each type of device -- they don't recognize USB keys
> as generic storage devices -- which can be a headache.  Not a problem with
> halfway-current versions.
>
> > You can look at various web sites you can find different prices.  Canada
> > Computers has pretty consistently excellent prices, but the
> > Spadina/College area stores provide some of the best competition-based
> > values in the city.
>
> Canada Computers has a store on College -- south side, more or less at the
> west end of the computer district.  They carry Kingmax in particular.
>
> > USB2 is nice if you get larger media.
>
> It's pretty universal now anyway.
>
> > I have standardized on SD cards,
> > which are reasonably priced, pretty fast, small, light and inter-operate
> > with camera, MP3 player, PDA etc, but you know better what you need.
>
> There are about three flash formats which make sense:
>
> + USB keys, because every modern computer has USB ports (no adapters
> needed), and they're so popular that they're cheap and roomy.
>
> + Compact Flash cards, the clear winner (last I looked) on capacity and
> price.  They *own* the high-end camera market and feature prominently in a
> lot of other areas too.
>
> + SD (Secure Digital) cards, rather smaller than CF and very popular in
> miniature devices like PDAs, where it's awkward to make room for a CF slot.
>
> The assorted other flash-card formats are all also-rans, to my thinking.
> Avoid locking yourself in by buying devices which use them.
>
> (If you want a write-protect switch...  Some, but by no means all, USB
> keys have them.  One or two brands of CF cards used to have them, but
> apparently none in current production do.  All SD cards do, it's part of
> the specs for that format.)
>
>                                                           Henry Spencer
>                                                        henry-lqW1N6Cllo0sV2N9l4h3zg at public.gmane.org
>
>
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