The drive is made of plastic and metal, but it's not the heavy plastic seen on the Kingston DataTraveler Ultimate 3.0 Generation 2 (32GB, $80 street, 4 stars). The plastic shell mostly hides the metal ...
Just when you thought that there was no way a Flash drive could be made even more useful, Verbatim turns one into a paperclip. Its new Store 'n' Go Clip-It USB Drive will be available in 2GB and 4GB ...
Your USB thumb drive is about to get smaller with the Verbatim Store 'n' Stay, a portable flash drive that's no larger than a dime. But don't let it get lost in your ...
Twenty dollars doesn’t go far these days, but it can get you an 8GB USB 3.0 flash drive from Verbatim. The company announced its Store ‘n’ Go V3 drives, which feature USB 3.0 speed, retractable ...
Verbatim introduced the new Store ‘n’ Go Clip-it USB drive. This ultra-lightweight flash drive features a clip-on design and a very small size. The drive offers 4GB of storage and can be snapped onto ...
In prepping for our CEDIA coverage this year one of the things I wanted was an easy way to carry helpful website and graphics files around with me during the show. As you can probably guess, lugging a ...
Verbatim Corp., of Charlotte, N.C., has announced its new line of Store 'n' Go Corporate Secure USB Flash Drives designed to protect data contents with mandatory security features. Based on Verbatim's ...
Verbatim’s new Tuff-Clip Flash Drive is constructed from ABS plastic, or Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene if you want to get technical. ABS plastic is well known for its hard-wearing and ...
USB flash drives are about to get much smaller with the Verbatim Store 'n' Stay, a portable storage solution that's about the size of a dime and comes with capacities up to 16GB. The 5-mm low-profile ...
We can't honestly say we've ever had a flash drive go bad because it wasn't tough enough, but apparently there's a market of globe-trotting ex-military jungle assassins out there big enough for ...
A word of warning to those of you who rely on hardware-based encrypted USB flash drives. Security firm SySShas reportedly cracked the AES 256-bit hardware-based encryption used on flash drives ...
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