Your best source of information and news about winvista, windows vista and BIOS on the internet

Vista ARTICLES TOP 50 Spyware Virus Vista SOFT Vista HELP

flash drives

You are currently browsing the articles from MS Windows Vista Compatible Software matching the category flash drives.

Kingston DataTraveler Vault USB Flash Drive

If you are agog over the USB drives, here is a new one from Kingston which is also compatible with the MAC OS. Normally, there are a select number of USB flash drives that can be read by MACs and now Kingston has put all those conflicts to rest with the DataTraveler Vault USB Flash Drive.

“Our DataTraveler Vault – Privacy Edition has been popular with enterprise and government customers who use Windows-based systems and are looking for a safe and secure way to transport portable data,” said Mark Akoubian, Flash memory business manager, Kingston. “We are happy to add Mac support to this 100-percent secured drive so the Apple community can be assured they have an on-the-go storage solution that is the best on the market at safeguarding data.”

Data onboard the DTVP is secured by hardware-based, on-the-fly, 256-bit Advanced Encryption Standard (AES). The drive has fast data transfer rates and is protected from brute-force attacks by locking down after 10 unsuccessful login attempts. After lockdown, a reformat is necessary to make the Flash drive operable again.

(Source) Press

Written by PC Freak on April 23rd, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on kingston and otherSoftware and flash drives and Hard Drives and USB.

Format a USB drive with NTFS file system

By default, Windows XP will not allow you to use anything but the FAT and FAT32 file systems to format your USB drives. With a little fiddling you can also enable the NTFS file system on your removable devices though. As for whether you would want to, there are pros and cons.

On the positive side, enabling NTFS allows you to encrypt your documents with Windows XP’s built in file encryption (though you should only do this in a Windows 2000 or 2003 domain network). It also allows the use of file compression to stretch the capacity of your disk. You can also use NTFS to allow and deny permissions for individual files and folders within XP, something you can’t do with FAT file systems. You can also set disk quotas. In short, enabling NTFS on flash drives might have several benefits for IT departments that use or issue these devices as standard. (more…)

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Written by Jason on November 15th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on flash drives and file encryption and file compression and linux systems and ntfs partitions and usb drives and upshot and read ntfs and drive faster and disk quotas and Drivers and Windows XP and Hardware and ntfs file system and USB Drive and disk activity and default windows and Windows.