It's Kingston day here at TestFreaks, well it wasn't planned that way, but I figured I'd follow up Tom's Kingston HyperX Ram review with my own HyperX review as well, not ram though a USB drive.
Fast; Well made; Capless
None really
Manufacturer: Kingston
It's Kingston day here at TestFreaks, well it wasn't planned that way, but I figured I'd follow up Tom's Kingston HyperX Ram review with my own HyperX review as well, not ram though a USB drive.
Fast; Well made; Capless
None really
Perfect for company employees frequently travelling between computers
Robust capless design; reasonably fast; useful synchronisation & encryption apps
Software don't work on Mac OS or Linux
USB capacity wars are raging hot. Now memory giant Kingston has upped the ante, introducing the 8 GB DataTraveler Secure Privacy Edition. The drive is dark grey with black rubber piping for grip; it will weather dusty Indian conditions with ease.
While the security features offered by the DataTraveler Secure offering are useful, they do come at a price premium. So, unless security is a paramount issue, I would recommend the DataTraveler ReadyFlash for most users. It is one third the price and performed slightly better in my tests.
It's fantastically overpriced, but works well
4GB of space
Expensive
Kingston's DataTraveler is a larger-than-average flash drive that's easy to operate and a little less expensive than other drives.
Attractive design; relatively inexpensive per megabyte; can password-protect data
Fairly large
Maybe I got a rear duff one, maybe I didn't
It would be very good if it hadn't have stopped working
Got it from 'TechNextDay' to plug into my stereo so it could play mp3 files of it; I filled it up quite a bit; Was working fine doing this; Then I decided to put an an extra album on there; This sort of worked fine; The tracks were mixed up in there order for some strange reason.
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