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PC Magazine July 7, 2004 |
Rugged Flash Drive There are a lot of flash memory USB drives out there, but this one stands apart. |
Entrepreneur November 2006 Amanda C. Kooser |
Flash Forward Your data won't miss a beat with one of these super-portable drives. |
Macworld November 2001 John Christopher |
USB Flash Storage Flash memory drives are fast and will work with any USB-equipped system. They're relatively expensive right now, but if your main goal is portability and you only need a few megabytes, a flash drive is hard to beat... |
PC Magazine November 22, 2005 Dan Costa |
USB Key Superguide The ultimate guide to flash drives, U3 keys, and USB hard drives. Kingston DataTraveler Elite... Memorex M Flyer TravelDrive... Memina Pocket Rocket with Dock-IT... LG USB Drive... |
PC Magazine October 19, 2004 Craig Ellison |
One Tough Flash Drive SanDisk Cruzer Titanium is coated with titanium, which gives this 512MB USB 2.0 flash drive a solid feel. |
The Motley Fool October 17, 2005 Dan Bloom |
NAND Flash Dazzles Investors More devices are using NAND flash -- but manufacturers' profits aren't guaranteed. Investors, take note. |
PC World October 2004 Tom Spring |
Tiny Drives With Big Brains Having basically replaced floppy disks as the portable media of choice for small amounts of PC data, USB flash drives are pursuing more widespread adoption. |
InternetNews December 26, 2003 Clint Boulton |
Mini Storage Drives Poised to Make Waves Already a favorite in Asia, USB flash drives are becoming a consumer favorite in the U.S., but explosive growth is stymied by a lack of awareness and security concerns. |
PC Magazine November 30, 2005 Molly K. McLaughlin |
Keyboard as Dock The Matias USB 2.0 Keyboard includes a dock for high-speed USB devices such as portable music players, flash drives, and digital cameras. |
InternetNews January 6, 2005 Tim Gray |
Mini is Big in Storage at CES Creative and Memorex highlight their mini wares at the Consumer Electronics show. |
PC World July 25, 2006 Edward N. Albro |
Quick Take: The Petito Flash Drive The smallest storage device yet. |
PC Magazine March 16, 2005 Craig Ellison |
Big Storage, Small Package Measuring 1.88 by 2.75 by 0.45 inches, the US Modular Monstor Drive looks like a USB flash drive on steroids. |
InternetNews March 9, 2005 Michael Singer |
Sony, Apple Seek Fame With a Little Flash The latest Walkman and iPod players capitalize on the growing popularity of Flash drives. |
Macworld March 2002 Kristina DeNike |
DiskOnKey Portable USB flash drive is no flash in the pan... |
The Motley Fool June 19, 2006 Seth Jayson |
Much Ado About Flash There's a lot of flash and spin regarding the replacement of hard drives with new gizmos. Don't invest until you know the basics. |
AskMen.com |
Top 5 Tiny Flash Drives Want to have your important data on hand anywhere, any time? These five USB flash drives offer the perfect solution: they're tiny, convenient and a snap to use. |
InternetNews November 18, 2005 David Needle |
Tiny 'Smart' Drives Hold More Than Data U3-labeled smart drives let you take a personal workspace with you on a key chain. |
Macworld December 2001 Kristina De Nike |
USB Flash Drives part two We review two new drives, Trekstor's ThumbDrive and M-System's DiskOnKey. We found that DiskOnKey is easier to use than any of the three other drives we've seen... |
InternetNews July 31, 2006 Clint Boulton |
In a Flash, a Retail Boon For SanDisk SanDisk today agreed to purchase msystems Ltd. for $1.55 billion in stock, a deal that would add another big fish to the shrinking pool of Flash memory technology. |
The Motley Fool May 31, 2006 Dan Bloom |
NOR Flash's Time to Shine? iSuppli believes that a NOR flash shortage may materialize this year, and Spansion shareholders stand to benefit. |
InternetNews December 11, 2007 |
Toshiba Joins Solid-State Notebook Drive Push Chip maker Toshiba Corp. said on Monday it would make flash-based solid state drives for notebook PCs, as it seeks to create new sources of demand for flash memory chips. |
PC Magazine September 2, 2003 Bill Machrone |
Storage on Hand (Well, Wrist) The new EDGE DiskGO! USB Watch Flash Drive has 128MB or 256MB of built-in flash memory, with the USB connector cleverly concealed in the rubber wristband. |
InternetNews December 21, 2005 David Needle |
Lexar JumpDrive Has Google Inside Consumers will soon be able to buy Lexar's USB Flash drives with Google's Picasa, Google Toolbar and Google Desktop Search applications included. |
The Motley Fool June 7, 2006 Dan Bloom |
The Great NAND Rush of '06 NAND flash production capacity is skyrocketing. Is a downturn in sight? Investors, take note. |
Entrepreneur December 2005 Mike Hogan |
It's a Small World Keep all your essential data in the palm of your hand with U3, a Windows software layer/environment that turns tiny-but-spacious USB flash sticks into "smart" drives capable of holding programs and data. |
InternetNews January 10, 2005 Sean Michael Kerner |
USB Flash Drives Move Beyond Storage USB Flash drives are set to become more than just simple storage devices. The new U3 platform announced at the CES by M-Systems and SanDisk promises to standardize Flash devices for application delivery. |
PC Magazine March 2, 2005 Craig Ellison |
All-Purpose Flash Drive The Swissbit SwissMemory USB Victorinox combines a USB 2.0 flash drive with a file/screwdriver, a knife, a pen, scissors, and an LED flashlight. |
Financial Advisor March 2007 Joel Bruckenstein |
Working On The Road New software and updated USB flash drives make it much easier to go mobile. Portable Software Applications... Rocket Mobile & Security Center... U3 Software Applications... DmailerSync Plus... Windows ReadyBoost Memory Expansion... |
The Motley Fool April 19, 2007 Dan Bloom |
Spansion's Loss Expansion Spansion is still struggling to generate a profit. Investors, take note. |
InternetNews March 15, 2006 Clint Boulton |
Kingston Flash For Businesses Kingston Technology Company introduced DataTraveler Elite Privacy Edition, a USB Flash drive that locks down data with 128-bit AES encryption, a powerful security protocol. |
InternetNews January 4, 2008 Judy Mottl |
Victory For Flash as Hitachi Cans Tiny Hard Disks Hitachi is kissing production of its smallest hard drive disks goodbye, citing poor sales and the increasing shift to flash technology when it comes to demand for mobile device storage. |
InternetNews March 13, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
Intel: Hitting Flash Market at Both Ends IBM has entered the Flash drive market with its Z-U130 Value Solid-State Drive, which uses NAND Flash memory with a USB interface. |
The Motley Fool September 12, 2005 Seth Jayson |
News Flash? Yeah, Right. Investors looking to cash in on the growing demand for flash memory would do best to look past Samsung and Toshiba, the giant conglomerates making the raw memory. Instead, they should seek opportunities from flash-systems provider M-Systems or SanDisk or even Lexar Media. |
InternetNews June 3, 2004 Michael Singer |
Intel Firm on Spring Sales Despite a perceived dip in PC purchases, the chip making giant expects sales of communications devices to boost its Q2 results. |
The Motley Fool December 17, 2009 Eric Jhonsa |
2010's Best Tech Stock: SanDisk Booming smartphone and solid-state drive sales will propel the flash memory giant. |
BusinessWeek October 17, 2005 Moon Ihlwan |
March Of The Flash Chips NAND flash-memory chips power Apple's new iPod - and look set to compete with hard drives. |
The Motley Fool July 24, 2006 Dan Bloom |
Spansion's Loss Contracts The flash memory maker sees revenues exceed expectations as losses narrow. If it's able to deliver on its multichip ORNAND memory package, Spansion may yet make an interesting investment. |
InternetNews October 22, 2009 |
Micron Flash Advance: Live Longer and Rewrite The flash memory giant addresses a lingering problem for flash memory-based drives, their durability over time. |
InternetNews July 23, 2010 |
What Keeps SSD From Replacing Spinning Disks Flash is faster, cooler and uses less power, but there's one little problem that keeps it from ever really replacing spinning disks. |
PC Magazine May 10, 2005 Carol A. Mangis |
TikiMac Big Tiki Drive This device is just a USB 2.0 flash drive embedded in a scowling tiki and sprouting a 6-foot light-up USB cable, but we can't resist a peripheral this goofy. |
IEEE Spectrum December 2012 Yu-Tzu Chiu |
Flash Memory Survives 100 Million Cycles A little heat lets flash beat typical 10 000-cycle limit |
The Motley Fool July 20, 2006 Dan Bloom |
Novellus Flashes Forward Novellus Systems reported results for its fiscal second quarter. As expected, the chip equipment maker reported strong increases in sales, earnings, and bookings, and expressed a remarkably bright outlook for NAND flash memory. What's next? |
Search Engine Watch October 1, 2002 Danny Sullivan |
FAST Adds Flash Support, Provides Results To HotBot Europe FAST has added the ability to search for text within Macromedia Flash files via its AllTheWeb.com site, and the search engine has also taken over providing results to HotBot in Europe. |
InternetNews February 6, 2007 David Needle |
Has SanDisk Solved USB Device Security? A SanDisk-only solution joins others that share, as the burgeoning Flash drive security space takes hold. |
InternetNews January 7, 2004 Michael Singer |
Infineon Joins Flash Memory Melee The German chipmaker jumps into a profitable but potentially volatile market that is teeming with competitors. |
BusinessWeek June 11, 2007 Stephen H. Wildstrom |
How Flash Will Change PCs Faster, less power-hungry flash drives will see wider use as costs fall and capacity rises. |
InternetNews August 8, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
Patent For Flash File System Datatlight's new file system trims the FAT and reduces I/O on a flash drive. |
InternetNews July 21, 2009 |
Adobe Opens Up Flash Framework No, Flash is not open source, but a new framework surrounding it is. |
PC Magazine July 29, 2003 Jamie M. Bsales |
Is That a GB in Your Pocket? If 256MB or even 512MB USB memory drives aren't enough, IOPlus will soon offer a 1GB version of its PocketDisk. |
PC Magazine March 16, 2004 Leon Erlanger |
Hacked in a Flash Tiny USB drives offer unparalleled convenience to all sorts of users--including data thieves. |