also @ TechSpot: HP TouchPad running Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich
Welcome to the TechSpot OpenBoards. Please read the FAQ if you have any questions. Sign up or Login to participate.

Go Back   TechSpot OpenBoards > TechSpot Editorial and Site Feedback > TechSpot News and Comments

Collaborate in the cloud with Office, Exchange, SharePoint, and Lync

Kingston unveils world's first 256GB USB flash drive

Thread Tools Search this Thread
  #1  
Old 07-20-2009
Matthew's Avatar
TechSpot Editor, Community Manager
 
Location: Pennsylvania
Member since: Feb 2008, 4,974 posts
System specs
Kingston unveils world's first 256GB USB flash drive

After delivering the world’s first 128GB USB flash drive, Kingston has claimed the title again for their 256GB DataTraveler 300. The drive makes use of a cap-less design which seems to employ a sliding mechanism to eject the USB head. Being larger than my primary OS HDD, I imagine this beast can host quite the cache of media.

Read the whole story
__________________
"Dependence begets subservience and venality, suffocates the germ of virtue, and prepares fit tools for the designs of ambition." -Thomas Jefferson
  #2  
Old 07-20-2009
Technochicken's Avatar
TechSpot Paladin
 
Location: Atlanta
Member since: Jun 2008, 852 posts
System specs
My god that's massive. If my calculations are right, and the flash drive actually could average a 10mb/s write speed, it would still take a bit over 7 hours to fill. This will only appeal to a very small group of customers though. For that price, you could buy 9 terabytes worth of external hard drive space.
  #3  
Old 07-20-2009
Burty117's Avatar
TechSpot Chancellor
 
Location: High Wycombe, England
Member since: Feb 2009, 1,445 posts
System specs
Possibly the most expensive and useless USB drive in the world, wait for a USB 3.0 capable one for this kind of size.
  #4  
Old 07-20-2009
TechSpot Paladin
 
Location: Hillsboro, OR
Member since: Jul 2009, 822 posts
Could make for a hell of a backup system for mobile/isolated platforms with fairly small drives (160s maybe). Or a backup for your media...

But, umm, why would you want to? You could get an SSD and put it in an external 2.5 drive enclosure, for less money and much faster performance. The only premium feature going for it is the smaller form factor.
  #5  
Old 07-20-2009
Matthew's Avatar
TechSpot Editor, Community Manager
 
Location: Pennsylvania
Member since: Feb 2008, 4,974 posts
System specs
Granted, there are both faster and larger capacity solutions but I think (as usual) most people overlook the target. This is not meant to be the fastest nor largest capacity storage option - no USB flash drive is. It's meant to be portable - and it is.

Yes, a one-thousand-dollar 256GB USB flash drive has a limited audience. I think the fact that they're built to order shows that Kingston realizes this. Nevertheless, the drive is probably very useful to a handful of professionals out there.

You can compare apples to oranges all day long, but the bottom line is, this thumb drive has the highest capacity presently available and it doesn't sacrifice much in the size department.
  #6  
Old 07-20-2009
Guest
 
Just give it a while, and the price will come down as all other pieces of tech.

Fairly excited that they're producing these now, only a matter of time before we see 1TB flash/jump drives.
  #7  
Old 07-20-2009
TechSpot Chancellor
 
Location: Seattle
Member since: Feb 2009, 1,549 posts
System specs
I can't even imagine what processes, applications or files you would need one of these for. It's impressive no doubt. But as example, a typical DivX movie is only 700mb. You really want a thumb drive to tote around nearly 300 movies?
  #8  
Old 07-20-2009
Guest
 
readyboost is going to suck balls with those r/w speeds
  #9  
Old 07-20-2009
Technochicken's Avatar
TechSpot Paladin
 
Location: Atlanta
Member since: Jun 2008, 852 posts
System specs
Readyboost speeds up your computer by using the extremely low access time of solid state drives, so bandwidth is not as important. With readyboost, the flash drive will never have to transfer 10mb/s.

For such an expensive drive though, I'm surprised that there aren't other connectivity options besides USB. For instance, I've seen flash drives that have eSATA on one side, and USB on the other.
  #10  
Old 07-20-2009
Wendig0's Avatar
TechSpot Paladin
 
Location: Florida
Member since: Oct 2008, 797 posts
System specs
This type of drive would be great for Seismic software companies that routinely demo their products for large oil companies. After having worked in IT for one of them, and managing the bulky external drives the sales force checked out, this type of portability would most likely be appealing to the salesmen of those companies. eSata, however, should be an available option.
  #11  
Old 07-21-2009
tengeta's Avatar
TechSpot Booster
 
Location: Tucson, AZ, USA
Member since: Oct 2008, 612 posts
System specs
Get R/W speeds up or you can make 20TB flash drives that have little to no more use than 2GB ones.
  #12  
Old 07-21-2009
Guest
 
That's bigger than my hard drive. I want one.
  #13  
Old 07-22-2009
license27kill's Avatar
TechSpot Member
 
Location: ~in between your imagination~
Member since: Apr 2009, 73 posts
System specs
talking about great and huge storage..

i might need flash drive..

but i dont need expensive and bigger storage that will prove as fast as the smaller ones.

40-60 gig is enough.

250gig is sick.

i will really wait for that portable ssd to be cheap..

;)
  #14  
Old 07-22-2009
Guest
 
USB 3.0 wouldn't make any difference as its the memory itself that is slow not the interface.
Closed Thread

Similar Topics
Topic Replies Forum
Removal of Write Protection on Kingston 4GB Flash Drive 7 Storage and Networking
Seagate unveils world's thinnest 2.5-inch notebook drive 7 TechSpot News and Comments
Kingston unveils SSDNow V Series 40GB Boot Drive 11 TechSpot News and Comments
Kingston usb flash drive problem 1 Other Hardware
Kingston flash drive problem. 2 Storage and Networking

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:18 PM.