1GB USB Drive on a Keychain 274
sparcv9 writes "JMTek looks to be about ready to release a line of keychain-sized
USB drives, ranging in capacity from 16MB to 1GB. The
1GB models are a bit pricey at almost
$900US, but the 16, 32 and 64MB models are all under $100. These
devices require no external power supply, claim a data retention of 10 years, and are 'driverless' -- which means that the drives will work under Linux, according to JMTek (see the 'Operating Systems' row in the specs table.)"
These have been out forever... (Score:2, Informative)
Though, all I want for yule is a solid state harddrive that's as fast as ram...
Months even, PenDrive w/Linux support, even (Score:3, Interesting)
Suport Windows ME/2000/XP, Mac OS (ver. 8.6 or above) and Linux kernel version 2.4.0 or above without driver.
Driverless, drivers will be available for download (Score:1)
Re:Win98 doesn't conform (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Win98 doesn't conform (Score:2)
However I would question the claim that other systems did have it at that time, can anybody confirm?
Tens years? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Tens years? (Score:2)
and keys can be replaced... what if your data ws valuable on your keychain and you either broke it or lost your keys? the horror!
Re:Tens years? (Score:2)
"Before you leave your home or work, backup your most important data and carry it with you . Imagine being able to keep your budget, your address book or important email in your pocket without worry!"
Smoking (Score:1, Troll)
Less than 1CM Thick? Use it in a camera! (Score:3, Insightful)
67mm w/cap x 20mm x 9mm
60mm w/o cap x 20mm x 9mm
I'm not sure they have anything more than prototypes at the moment, but this is still a pretty nifty advance for people who need more storage for digital video and digital photography.
Re:Less than 1CM Thick? Use it in a camera! (Score:2)
Uhm, this isn't new... (Score:2, Informative)
Check out the 8mb model for $25...
http://commerce.www.ibm.com/cgi-bin/ncommerce/P
Re:Uhm, this isn't new... (Score:2)
Re:Uhm, this isn't new... (Score:2)
Re:Uhm, this isn't new... (Score:2)
Just ordered one for myself...
What a nightmare for corporations (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:What a nightmare for corporations (Score:2)
Re:What a nightmare for corporations (Score:2)
Yup... write a Group Policy Object (Score:2)
Bulletin from Lawrence Livermore (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Bulletin from Lawrence Livermore (Score:2)
Corporations will notice easily. (Score:2)
It's the smaller shops that don't use or can't afford the management software that will have problems with this, as well as the companies that have lax desktop security standards and useless AUPs. In those cases, I suggest two-part epoxy. Epoxy the keyboard and mouse cables in (and reduce theft!), and epoxy nice sturdy plastic over the rest of the ports. Voila! With a lot of work, you can probably remove the cover to add devices or replace the mouse and keyboard, although it's probably easier cutting the cable and splicing the new one in.
Re:Corporations will notice easily. (Score:2)
the DMI software will automatically send an alert to management software
Copy data to local HD. (It is there. or can XP/windows 2000 boot remote and still perform)
Unplug network.
copy data to little unauthorized device.
Unplug device.
Power down pc.
Leave office.
Do this before the weekend and even in a secure environment you have quite some time.
Oops! (Score:2, Funny)
Is it just me but Driverless? (Score:2, Redundant)
"* Windows 98 Drivers will be available for download"
My guess is that it may use an exhisting driver, or the package you buy has one.
Drivers built into OS (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Is it just me but Driverless? (Score:2, Informative)
Personally I'd rather have a Firewire one instead. Transferring 1GB over USB would take quite a while.
Re:Is it just me but Driverless? (Score:2)
Nor is an IDE drive, disk drive or serial port - each needs a driver. They are just usually written into the OS. In this case, any OS that supports USB does not need a driver for this drive. If the OS supports USB, then it's automagically supported.
As has been pointed out to you twice now, Win98 does not support this because it has broken USB support. Think of the software as a patch to fix Win98's USB support - happy now?
Does an external modem need a driver? No. Does the serial port have to work to use it? Yes. If your OS requires some setup for the serial port to work, then it dosen't mean that the external modem needs a driver. It means that your OS doesn't support the serial port. Win98 doesn't support (completely) the Universal Serial Bus... that doesn't mean that *this* needs a driver, it means that the *USB port* needs a driver.
--
Evan
Re:Is it just me but Driverless? (Score:2)
Perhaps "Generic Drivered"? (Score:5, Insightful)
In recent Linux releases, there is a USB_STORAGE driver that can be included in the kernel; I would presume that's what they're referring to, at least vis-a-vis Linux support.
It's entirely likely that three years ago, W98 didn't include drivers for disk storage devices, thus meaning that if you want to use the device with W98, you need such a "generic driver."
Similarly, Windows NT 4 is getting pretty old; it likely didn't include support for USB storage devices either.
In a sense, this may be regarded kind of like having SCSI support. You do need a SCSI driver to access SCSI devices, but once you've got that, there's no special driver for Seagate drives as compared to Quantum or IBM...
Re:Perhaps "Generic Drivered"? (Score:3, Informative)
Might catch on (Score:1)
Re:Might catch on (Score:2, Interesting)
IBM Disk on Key (Score:5, Interesting)
While 8mb has been fine for the 6 months I've had the thing, of course these new releases will force me to upgrade.
On thing though, its a serious Pain In The Ass to try and plug one of these things in blind. I've got a USB hub at home, but they really aren't all that common yet.
Pete
Re:IBM Disk on Key (Score:2)
Re:IBM Disk on Key (Score:2)
Chris Beckenbach
1GB = 900? Yeah right (Score:2)
Re: More for less... (Score:2, Informative)
Also has stereo audio and (still) video out.
Why pay $900 for this when you can have so much more for less?
Re:1GB = 900? Yeah right (Score:4, Insightful)
Seriously! And who the hell compares the functionality of a batteryless keychain hard drive with no moving parts to a freaking PDA! The only way to get a gig on a PDA is to find one that takes CompactFlash and use the IBM 1GB CompactFlash microdrive... complete with moving parts!
details, and a bad choice? (Score:2)
personally, i'll hold out for a firewire version. transfering up to 1GB at USB speeds is a bit slow for me.
Re:details, and a bad choice? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:details, and a bad choice? (Score:2)
You've got to want this for size or coolness... (Score:3, Insightful)
But I really don't see what it's good for. Storing lots of stuff? CD-R or CD-RW; your computer probably has a drive already, and you can stash more data than even the 1/2 GB drive. Holding encryption keys? You want something a lot smaller, cheaper and more rugged. Having something neat to put in your pocket? Okay, but that's not going to sell lots of them.
Re:You've got to want this for size or coolness... (Score:4, Informative)
Dell has been selling 8-32Mb [dell.com] versions for more than a year, but they require a driver install
Re:You've got to want this for size or coolness... (Score:2)
FUD. Or please explain how exactly you are going to get it to execute anything when plugged in? When you plug this in, it's like plugging in a CF memory card. XP might ask you whether you want to download pictures/music off it, but other than that its harmless.
Re:You've got to want this for size or coolness... (Score:2)
Re:You've got to want this for size or coolness... (Score:2)
Also, physical security is the first step in any computer security. If your maintenance people having access to your workers PCs is a security concern, these keys aren't going to affect that one way or another.
If I was in maintenance and wanted your data, I wouldn't screw around with a key. I'd open up your system and take your hard disk, or just take the whole damn machine.
Re:You've got to want this for size or coolness... (Score:2)
Re:You've got to want this for size or coolness... (Score:2)
This [ibm.com] is close. We sold thousands of these to a customer giving them away to parents of schoolkids, but it didn't sit in the bulky adapter. Pure USB front and back, no CD-ROM, no floppy. Just USB, modem, and ethernet. They support Wake-on-LAN and we burned fifty of these things at a clip using automated burning tools [ibm.com].
Also, for putting distros on these things, do you know of a BIOS that lets you boot off a USB storage device?
See above. You can actually specify USB storage device as the bootable device.
Re:You've got to want this for size or coolness... (Score:2)
pretty cool but i don't need it... (Score:2)
One thing the specs didn't touch on was how many times the "drive" can be written to? I know that memory like this has a limited life, similar to a digital camera. I think this is a good idea, but it would be a pain to plug this thing in the BACK of the computer, just to access your work. (Yes, most computers still have the USB port in the back.)
also, it's a pity that we are so close to usb 2.0 becoming a vialbe solution. I guess speed is not that important to most people, but i would prefer a firewire or USB2 keychain drive - the cost to build one would be about the same.
So does this compete in the market with zip disks, cd-r's, floppy disks, clik! disks, and portable usb hard drives? seems like a pretty tight market to me...
Driverless (Score:2, Redundant)
Why doesn't everything work like this? (Score:3, Interesting)
This isn't just a Linux thing, too - don't you love it when, running Windows, you can just have a piece of hardware start working without you futzing around with separate driver disks? The only way that happens is when the hardware significantly predates your version of Windows (i.e. not often) or when it follows some standard that Windows already knows how to support. It's so much more fun to install a new hard drive (even internally) than, say, a new video card.
Video cards, at least, are advancing by leaps and bounds and so have an excuse for rapidly changing hardware protocols. But scanners? Webcams?
Re:However... (Score:2)
I think you must have erred somewhere. I don't see two versions offered.
Buy those things locally (Score:4, Informative)
We ordered 2 of em from a different company, one worked fine and dandy, the other had a bad connection somewhere internally and would crash the USB bus and only mount about 1/8 of the time. They were $80 each for 64 MB versions (a good price, mind you), but next time, we will only buy locally, so that returns can be much easier.
Loss & theft prevention/deterence (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Loss & theft prevention/deterence (Score:2, Informative)
If my pendrive is stolen I at least know that my private data is unusable.
Christ in a squeeze-bottle (Score:3, Interesting)
The prices are the same or a smidgen higher than the same size CompactFlash, Smartmedia, Memory Stick or MMC cards.
And they've been out for more than a year, though the 512MB and 1GB models are pretty recent. The idea is they're an alternative to shuttling a small batch of files around on a Zip disk or such, or burning a CD.
As for actual hard drives, for half that $900 figure you can get a PC Card drive for your laptop that holds 5GB though like IBM Microdrives it's obviously a bit more delicate. And you can get pocket-sized 30GB Firewire and USB 2 drives for the same $400 or so these days.
What doesn't get posted to Slashdot these days? When will we be hearing about someone discovering Dim Sum? Or asking for resources on learning how to drive a stick-shift?
Re:Christ in a squeeze-bottle (Score:2)
Re:What in the HELL is Dim Sum? (Score:2)
Geeky Lamentations (Score:5, Funny)
Sounds like a good, cynical business model--very fragile yet expensive products target-marketed to savvy techies with high disposable incomes.
Re:Geeky Lamentations (Score:2)
Drop keys
some downsides (Score:3, Informative)
I can already stick a cdrw in my pocket
Ho Hum, not the first (Score:2)
Importantly, you could have been buying them for the last year instead of having to wait until the 20th of this month. I love mine, beats using a floppy anyday (although you'll want to get a couple USB extender cables unless you're lucky enough to have frontside USB ports).
http://www.diskonkey.com/
I don't seethis as an incredible advance... (Score:2, Informative)
I guess I'll just wait till the $900 1gb model comes down in price...
Anyone remember how great the Iomega ClickDrive was supposed to be? Now its just another portable pseudo-flash medium.
--Fred
Speed (Score:2, Informative)
over 1MB/sec (read)
800 KB/sec (write)
So reading/writing that 1GB would take.. ummmm... forever.
Re:Speed (Score:2, Interesting)
hope it's waterproof (Score:2, Interesting)
I'd hate to send my portable storage device through the washing machine by accident if it's not...
End of floppies? (Score:2)
Could this at last be the end of crappy, unreliable floppy drives that haven't grown since the days of the 40 MB hard drive? Oh please, oh please, oh please . . .
portable-pr0n? (Score:2)
Is that a keychain in your pocket or are you just happy to see me?
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:make your own (Score:2, Funny)
Re:make your own (Score:3, Funny)
Re:make your own (Score:2)
If you have a system that doesn't have USB, but does have a floppy, use the SM option. You can buy an adapter that lets a system read an SM card in a floppy drive.
If you have a notebook without USB, use the CF option. Buy a CF - pc card adapter.
Either of these options will let you expand your CF / SM "drive" with new memory as the market changes. It also lets you spread your data across different cards if you have to. It also works as a beautiful add-on for digital cameras that don't support USB.
The down side is that CF and SM cards don't have a little loop on them for your keychain.
Re:make your own (Score:2)
I'm at 47 - hit me again!
Encryption Key (Score:3, Funny)
How many bit encryption would that be?
Re:Encryption Key (Score:2)
32 bits = ~4 billion values
64 bits = 4 billion x 4 billion (does this even have a word?)
96 bits = 4 billion x 4 billion x 4 billion (holy freaking)
128 bits = 4 billion x 4 billion x 4 billion x 4 billion (IPv6 addressing? aieee!)
Well, you get the idea. And I stopped at 16 bytes!
Re:Encryption Key (Score:2)
weel try this one:
http://www.alcyone.com/max/reference/physics/pref
wouldn't that be exallion values?
But i think a better look at encryption will prove that more bytes is not better securty above a vertain point. (For DES i know this)
I'll be impressed... (Score:2)
-db
What about flash? (Score:2)
IBM Microdrive (Score:2)
http://65.119.30.151/productimage/22-147-001-01.JP G
Use case (Score:2)
This is a good way to store all those 4096 bit keys with your physical ones. Just don't lose that ring!
works on audrey? (Score:3, Interesting)
some REALLY cool usage :) (Score:2, Interesting)
Suppose you and a friend have sensitive data, and you ONLY want yourselves to have access to it. Here's what you do...
Get a USB hub and 2 of these, hook them both up to a linux box, then use RAID to span a partition across them. That way, you can ONLY get the information when both of you are there, and anyone wanting it would have to steal/kill both of you to get it. It makes it a bit more harder brings you that much closer to Mission Impossible
Re:some REALLY cool usage :) (Score:2)
They'll be able to recover bits and pieces, most likely all of the data if you span the drives. And if your mirror them it's obviously pointless.
This could be made to work as you describe (use one key as a One-Time-Pad XOR for the other), but it's not quite that easy.
Re:some REALLY cool usage :) (Score:2)
Well it would work if the data was encrypted as well as being spanned across the devices. Retrieving the bits and pieces from one of the devices would be meaningless.
Probably not all that practical, and there are better ways, but a cool idea none-the-less... :)
One better way would be to have the private key spanned across the two devices, then there could be as much data to retrieve as you like on the disk, but you'd need both devices to unlock it.
All funky stuff - then again, if I was going that route, then I'd rather have something even smaller, such as iButton [ibutton.com] or something. :)
-- Pete.
I've got a 128MB DiskOnKey - these rock! (Score:3, Interesting)
What's it good for? Well, in my case, I'm using it to hold a set of Windows sysadmin tools (a VNC installer, Terminal Server client software, and a few other utilities), along with a full electronic copy of my company DR plan, and a ton of policy/procedure documents. With all that, I still have room to shuttle files around as well.
In fact, it's been so handy that we're replacing our printed copies of many off-site manuals with these. That way, it's much easier to keep up-to-date, and all we need to access everything is a computer with USB support and the ability to read HTML, PDF, and Word documents.
The coolest thing I found is that they're bootable, too - I just need to put an OS on one and it's an even better toolkit. Is the storage as cost-effective as CD-ROM? Of course not - it doesn't hold nearly as much, and the 128MB device, as I mentioned, cost $150. But it's far more rugged than a CD, and can be used in all sorts of circumstances where a CD can't. Heck, even a lot of the stripped-down PCs that are used in corporate IT shops have free USB ports.
If you need carry-around storage... (Score:2)
Eh? What? Size? Oh, it's 20 Gb
Actually, this is just a box with IDE <-> USB electronics into which you can put any standard laptop hard drive (and I put a 20Gb one in). Draws power from the USB port and is truly plug-and-play. Highly convenient. Recommended.
price changed (Score:2, Redundant)
ACK! Sorry! (Score:2)
GnuPG and Whisper32 (Score:3, Interesting)
For the remaining 7.8MB, I keep a bunch of small files that I would need most when I don't have my Thinkpad around -- my Notes ID file, some presentations that I've been working on for clients, and all the things I forget to save when I blow away the laptop.. the ethernet and modem drivers for one! (That's a mean catch-22) I also keep small installers that often give me trouble when downloading.. putty, AdAware spyware removal tool, Netscape 6 installer, LeetSpeak for genning passwords, Whisper32, and AIM95N.
Please people, stop comparing it to a PDA. They don't serve the same purpose at all.
Re:GnuPG and Whisper32 (Score:2)
OTOH, if we could use this in conjunction with some sort of encrypted FS, our designated safe dir (or the whole partition if you'd like) can only be accessed when this "key" is inserted. That'd be kinda nice (though I'm not trying to push this as an alternative to the above key store - it's just as risky on an untrusted machine).
GPG (PGP) key ring key ring? (Score:2)
Bootable USB? (Score:2)
It would be killer to use something like this as a drive on a fanless PC with a tiny Linux install.
New meaning (Score:2)
Were I to lose such a keychain, I'd be more concerned than if my car were stolen or destroyed. Goodness, my car isn't worth that.
how about.... (Score:2)
The fact is, I've a) become really really distrustful of all built-in hard-drives, after having like three or four of them fail (in two different home computers) within a two year period, two of them being "redundant" and failing at once, and not just the controller, and, what's more, with very clean power coming in. I just don't trust anything with moving parts anymore. Truth is, one gigabyte is more than enough for everything I need except media files, which don't need to be dynamically backed up (i.e. they only need one backup EVER, which is no-problem).
Do you know what REAL security is? It's not in having a thirteen-character password with alphanumerics for root...what good is that if your file-system (hmmmm? ext2?) isn't encrypted? Anyone can break into your computer, steal your hard-drive (bad enough), then, to add insult to injury, read the bits off your partition, reconstruct all your personal files, and take up a long-distance relationship with your former girlfriend. Ouch.
Anyway, real security isn't in having a long password: it's in having your hard-drive in your pocket when you leave your home. Plus, I think it would do us all good to have to constrain ourselves to a gigabyte...it would keep me from mindlessly copying huge directory structures to three or four places as version control, or a DVD that I'll only watch two or three times a month...wow, how useful that it's on my hard-drive? or all those CD images that I tell myself make it SO much more convenient to play these games that, really, I only get an opportunity to do a few times a month, and generally just be wasteful just because I "have the space"...it comes to bite you in the end, because there's no convenient way to do a backup. If you really need to copy whole CD's to hard-drive, do it on one mounted "spare" or "media" and keep it separate from your "real" (keychain USB) drive. Now if only linux could boot off USB as I hear a mac can....
[1] that's the official word, not "thingamajig", according to my dictionary.
[2] This is probably a ten-dollar piece of equipment. How hard can RAID-0 be? All you do is double every write and read request, and if you ever get a fail on any read or or write, start chirping like mad and somehow indicate which drive gave it to you. Of course, I'd hate to be the one writing the routine for what happens when the read of the two drives returns disparate bits...maybe you do a few more reads and if the drives stubbornly disagree about the state of the bit, ask the user, in the true linux fashion [whatever the equiviliant is to "Unable to read bit 4 of byte at F332D:2AAE4:F22A." with three buttons, one labelled one, one labelled zero, one labelled retry."] then ask him/her to replace whichever is the older one...
Made our own! (Score:3, Informative)
behave like USB storage device. I just put my Memory Stick card into it, run this program, plug it via
USB cable to Linux and I can mount it as SCSI drive,
having access to all my files on it. Best thing about it, is that you can have several cards.
Yes, it is bigger than keychain, but what the heck,
I carry my PDA with me all the time anyway!
PS2 + Linux + USB Key (Score:2)
Anyone know what filesystem these keys use? It would definitely be an impressive hack if someone can get the PS2 to view it as a very big memory card. Or, vice versa, take a 8MB PS2 memory card and rig a USB adapter to it somehow for PC storage.. Just some ideas if anyone is bored..
i'll have to say it again... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Irony (Score:2)