Buy Low Price From Here Now
The model UN2 external USB 2.0 hard drive provides a fast and easy way to add more storage! It is compatible with PCs and MACs (laptops/desktops) and is powered using the included USB 2.0 cable eliminating the need for a power adapter! The stylish black enclosure features a unique aluminum body engineered to effectively dissipate heat and allow for silent operation! The included NovaBackupĂ‚® software eliminates the need to push a button or click an icon to activate a backup. The software can operate automatically in the background saving your files to the drive while you work! Everything you need to backup your data is in the box!
Readmore
Technical Details
- USB-powered no external power supply needed- Plug-and-play connectivity with PC and Macintosh Computers
- Whisper quiet operation
- Includes NovaStor's award-winning NovaBackupĂ‚® 10 for Windows ($49.95 retail)
See more technical details
By R. Kang
it's truly the thinnest and smallest portable drive out there. i've been using it everyday since i got it a few months ago and it's been performing great!
one thing to keep in mind though, is that it comes with 2 usb connectors to pc in case extra power is needed, but it also seems to work okay by connecting just one.
it also comes with a nice sleeve. ^^
By Derek Krencik
I've only had this drive for about 5 hours and already I love it. It's small, sleek, and fast. Basically, it's a laptop hard disk with an external enclosure, however it is very sturdy and doesn't feel flimsy at all. The device can be used with a regular USB cable but, for optimized performance the dual USB cable that is included should be used. One thing to note, it's advertised at 320GB capacity although, the real amount is close to 300GB. This is because manufacturers use decimal measurements of bytes and computers use binary measurements. Personally, 20GB less doesn't matter to me. But for those who are concerned about capacity, I might recommend the 500GB model. Otherwise, this was a great purchase!
By Gordon M. Verber (Texas USA)
... causing you to miss a deadline, waste time, or lose data?
If you are in the 89.37% of the computing world that uses MS-Windows (1) that element would be the operating system.
Over the decades, I have had power-supplies, mother boards, memory sticks, disk drives, disk controllers, CPUs and other hardware elements all fail at inopportune times. But the single most common failure that I have is that of the MS-Windows operating system. Of note, I have NEVER had LINUX fail to boot due to a software error, but for affordable, cutting edge image and video editing Windows is the only game in town.
Last week I was trying to finish an important presentation for a scientific meeting. I had, at most, ten hours to finish it up. Booting my 2 month old quad-core, 4 GB RAM, 6 TB of storage, dual video-card monster it hung on the Windows-XP splash screen - though it had been fine that very morning, and I had installed nothing in the interval. Tried, failed, again, then went with the F8 "pick your poison" boot key. Choose "last known good". No Joy.
Well, the heck with it. Will boot safe-mode and roll back to a couple of days ago (just to be safe). Hung booting in safe-mode. Great. Now what? Cannot access the disks on the failed computer - unless I open it and remove them to another machine. To sort out the failed boot will take anywhere from 30 min to 8 hours, to a complete Windows reinstall, and I do NOT have the time (Fixed now, and it took just over an hour to sort it).
Fortunately for the past 8 months or so I have been using this portable disk WD320 drive as my main work drive, backing it up to the system RAID-0 at the end of each work session. All of the files for the presentation, and the presentation itself were on the portable drive, essentially only the backups were on the failed computer.
So, I simply started my main backup desktop (I have two others) and plugged my Wonderful WD320 into it expecting to get right back to work on the presentation. Sadly, the drive immediately started acting flakey - triggering, and retriggering, the "found new hardware daemon." It is never just one thing. Hoping for the best, I used the USB cord from my previous WD160 drive, which fixed the problem.
The point of all this is that the existence of large capacity, quite fast (I use the WD320 for video editing) portable external USB drives has changed how I use my computer. The actual work drive, with all the live data files, is the portable external. The internal drives on the computer are used for storage of completed work, backups of current projects, unimportant current projects, scratch disks, index disks, system and program disks. I do not rely upon internal drives for the storage of my current projects. If I had, once again, a Windows failure would have taken precious time from the little that I had left.
This series of events has also prompted me to get, yet another large, external drive for backup of the backups of the internal drives. My older computers all have these, but I was relying upon the RAID-0 on this computer to obviate that need. The near failure of the WD320 pointed out the need for another easily accessible - thus external - backup drive for the computer. Indeed, I am thinking that my next computer will have only a system drive, and a scratch drive internally, all other drives will be external.
If you value your data and your time buy this WD320 - but use it as your main data drive, and use the computer's internal drives as backup, instead of the other way around.
[...]
By D. Binda (New York, NY USA)
What impresses me the most about this usb powered external portable hard drive was of course its small size (about the size of an 120 GB ipod). Despite the fact that it is dwarfed in comparison to other such tool of its kind, it is nontheless capable of harboring up to 320 GB of data and smoothly operating on both mac and pc with minimun transition time. I managed to back up all my information from my PC laptop onto the External HD with expediency and to organize it through my mac laptop with similar ease...
A great product for anybody who seeks a convinient and small external HD. Higly recommended.
By H. J. Groves (Furlong, PA)
This is just an internal Western Digital drive with a case. It is as small as possible which is why I got it. I have been let down though. It isn't recognized on 3 of the 4 computers I've used so far. My work laptop (Win 2000) recognizes it fine. Our Vista laptop gives error messages. We have 2 XP desktops. One says it can't find the software for the external device. The other just simply doesn't show it. You can't get it to work at all.
Jan 22, 2009 update:
I have to send this back. It's junk. I think the problem is actually the USB connector, but am not positive. It only recognizes the device in some machines. Even when it does recognize it, there are frequent warnings that pop up saying the device has been removed unsafely. Sounds like a loose connection. What a bummer, I loved the small size!
Images Product
Buy 320GB External USB Powered 2.5" Mini Portable Hard Drive Now
No response to “320GB External USB Powered 2.5" Mini Portable Hard Drive”
Post a Comment