Verbatim Store ‘n’ Go USB 3.0 hard drives add color to your otherwise drab storage needs

Our parents always taught us that it’s what’s on the inside that counts — and that’s why we don’t ever take them hard drive shopping with us. Sure these Store ‘n’ Go drives are pretty standard 500GB HDDs, but hey, they come in Caribbean blue and hot pink, so they should fit in nicely with that neon fanny pack we just picked up to haul around our computer peripherals. The drives sport USB 3.0 and come loaded with Nero BackItUp software. You can pick them up for $100 from Verbatim’s site — they shouldn’t be too hard to spot. Decidedly less colorful press information after the break.

Continue reading Verbatim Store ‘n’ Go USB 3.0 hard drives add color to your otherwise drab storage needs

Verbatim Store ‘n’ Go USB 3.0 hard drives add color to your otherwise drab storage needs originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Aug 2011 07:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceVerbatim  | Email this | Comments

Western Digital Nomad case protects your My Passport drive from falls, spills, and curious lizards

It’s possible — likely, even — that you’re reading this while jumping out of a plane, wrestling a mountain lion, or having some equally hardcore adventure. If so, you’re just the type of active consumer Western Digital’s courting with its Nomad case. Designed for the My Passport external hard drive line, it combines a hard polycarbonate exterior with an elastomer interior that keeps the drive snug and secure, and provides another option if you’d rather upgrade your existing drive than spend the clams on a rugged one. It includes a USB port, making your data accessible even when the case is closed, and will set you back $30 according to WD. Lizard not included.

Continue reading Western Digital Nomad case protects your My Passport drive from falls, spills, and curious lizards

Western Digital Nomad case protects your My Passport drive from falls, spills, and curious lizards originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Jun 2011 02:25:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourcePRNewswire  | Email this | Comments

Clickfree C2 Rugged hard drive can fall down, backup

There’s just something about the phrase “built to strict U.S. military standards” that makes us want to go positively medieval on a rugged device. Sadly, the aforementioned qualifier doesn’t mean that Clickfree’s new C2 Rugged Back-up Drive is capable of withstanding, say, a hail of gunfire, but the rubberized disk will continue to work after being dropped from four feet. The peripheral also features the company’s Easy Run software, which will start automatically backing up your PC when you’re done showing that storage device who’s boss. The 500GB C2 is available now through Clickfree’s site for $140 — or $100, if you’re one of the lucky 100 first people to buy, so maybe buy two, in case you go a little overboard.

Continue reading Clickfree C2 Rugged hard drive can fall down, backup

Clickfree C2 Rugged hard drive can fall down, backup originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 21 May 2011 02:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceClickfree  | Email this | Comments

Seagate’s GoFlex Satellite portable hard drive streams content over WiFi (review)

Seagate just took the wraps off what’s likely the niftiest portable HDD to cross our path in a long, long while. The GoFlex Satellite is part storage device, part wireless media streamer, and it manages to wear both hats with little compromise on either end. For all intents and purposes, this is a standard 500GB GoFlex HDD with a bit of extra girth, an AC input, an 802.11b/g/n WiFi module and a built-in web server. The reason for those extras? A simple depression of the on / off button starts the streamer up, and it’s ready for a connection in around 30 to 40 seconds. Once fired up you can stream data to just about anything — even iOS devices. That’s an impressive feat, not quite a “first” moment as Seagate would like you to believe (we’ll give that crown to AirStash), but still a rarity.

Our unit shipped with a GoFlex USB 3.0 adapter and a car charger, with the latter enabling users to entertain their children on long road trips — a nice addition, we have to say. Installation is a cinch; just fire up a media sync application that resides on the drive (for OS X users, anyway), and you’re ready to drag and drop files as if it’s any ‘ole HDD. No media management software or anything of the sort, thankfully. The purpose of having your media onboard is to stream videos, photos, documents and music to your iPad, iPhone, iPod touch, or any other tablet, phone or laptop with WiFi. You heard right — while there’s only a dedicated app for the iOS family, any WiFi-enabled device with a web browser can tap into this. Care to hear our take on this $200 do-it-all hard drive? Have a look at our review video just after the break.

Continue reading Seagate’s GoFlex Satellite portable hard drive streams content over WiFi (review)

Seagate’s GoFlex Satellite portable hard drive streams content over WiFi (review) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 May 2011 08:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

FCC reveals Seagate GoFlex Satellite, a WiFi-capable battery-powered external hard drive

For a purportedly doomed manufacturer of magnetic storage, Seagate sure is spinning some interesting ideas these days — last year, we got modular, upgradable cables, and now the company’s testing external hard drives that don’t need pesky wires to function. According to filings, the Seagate GoFlex Satellite not only plays the network-attached-storage card with built-in 802.11 b/g/n WiFi, it’s also got a 3.7V battery inside its case… making the product’s name somewhat apt, don’t you think? According to a leaked description, Seagate’s also planning a companion iOS app called “GoFlex Media” to let your iDevices stream content directly from the device. Mind you, none of that means you won’t be able to dock with your Satellite the old-fashioned way — FCC docs also mention a USB 3.0 cable that delivers data and power simultaneously.

FCC reveals Seagate GoFlex Satellite, a WiFi-capable battery-powered external hard drive originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 14 May 2011 13:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceFCC  | Email this | Comments

I-O Data’s HDCA-UT3.0K drive offers USB 3.0 and 3TB of storage

If you’ve been on the hunt for the biggest, fastest hard drive around, it seems your options are expanding. I-O Data just introduced the HDCA-UT3.0K external hard drive, which offers USB 3.0 support and 3TB of storage, which, as the company notes, makes it an ideal companion for TVs with a USB recording mode. Struggling to resist the charm of its blue LED and the possibility of owning more storage than you’ll ever need? Look for it in mid-May with a price of ¥26,400 ($324).

I-O Data’s HDCA-UT3.0K drive offers USB 3.0 and 3TB of storage originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 30 Apr 2011 19:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Akihabara News, TCMagazine  |  sourceI-O Data  | Email this | Comments

Verizon FiOS TV 1.9 software update adds an HD guide, DVR enhancements

Originally projected to launch in Q4 of 2010, Verizon has finally started pushing out version 1.9 of its Media Guide software to set-top boxes in Buffalo, Syracuse, Albany and Harrisburg. Other regions can expect to be upgraded over the next couple of months, but just in case you’ve forgotten what’s coming here’s a few of the new features: a widescreen HD guide as shown above replacing the old 4×3 SD one, support for switching 3DTVs into the correct mode automatically, native passthrough, 1080p, external hard drives, DVD-style chaptering on DVR recordings, an all new search function and access to DVR recordings from other boxes in the house. Those are just some of the features included in this massive upgrade (not all of the boxes support all of the new features, doublecheck to see if yours is supported first — this could be a good time for an upgrade), check out the release notes on Verizon’s forums for more details, or check out the press release and a trailer for the new software included after the break.

Continue reading Verizon FiOS TV 1.9 software update adds an HD guide, DVR enhancements

Verizon FiOS TV 1.9 software update adds an HD guide, DVR enhancements originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Apr 2011 17:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceRelease Notes, YouTube  | Email this | Comments

G-Technology crashes NAB with portable, Thunderbolt-equipped RAID arrays

G-Technology Thunderbolt Prototype

The Thunderbolt goodness just keeps on rolling out at NAB. G-Technology just announced it will be adding support for the high-speed connection to its line of RAID devices for those who spend their days chopping up HD video. The first batch of products will hit in either Q3 or Q4 and start with the company’s smaller arrays in the four to eight-disc size. A prototype of a four-drive model can be seen in the photo above, which rep Pete Schlatter described to us as “the sweet spot” in terms of portability and storage. Sure, calling an eight drive array “portable” sounds like a stretch, but don’t forget: these are designed to be paired with laptops and carried by people editing video on the go — you know, guys with giant cases of equipment and biceps to match.

G-Technology crashes NAB with portable, Thunderbolt-equipped RAID arrays originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Apr 2011 01:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceBusiness Wire  | Email this | Comments

Rogue modder rips off stingy consumer, puzzles repairmen… all with a USB thumb drive

Welcome to today’s episode of “You Get What You Pay For,” starring some poor sap in Russia who bought an external hard drive in China for a “very, very low price.” It seemed like a bargain, until the schmo noticed that video files were picking up from the tail end, as if the preceding footage had vanished. When the folks at a local repair shop tore the disk apart they found a dinky 128MB thumb drive running in a loop, emptying itself when full only to start saving more data. Laugh all you want, but the repair guys (and us, frankly) are still scratching their heads as to how those scam artists pulled off this mod in the first place.

[Thanks, David S.]

Rogue modder rips off stingy consumer, puzzles repairmen… all with a USB thumb drive originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 11 Apr 2011 06:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceHardmac  | Email this | Comments

Seagate starts shipping pencil-thin $99 GoFlex Slim hard drive

Remember that 9mm 2.5-inch GoFlex external HDD that Seagate teased us with back at CES? You’re looking at it. The company has just gone official with the newly christened GoFlex Slim, a performance-oriented, multifaceted drive that’s slimmer than your mother’s last smartphone. The final product will boast USB 3.0 support, a 7200RPM drive (ours was 320GB), a three-year warranty and a price tag that’s still being determined. By the numbers, you’re looking at a pocketable drive weighing 0.356 pounds and measuring 4.91- x 3.07- x 0.354-inches, but due to the GoFlex attachment on the bottom, you’ll need the special SuperSpeed USB cable that Seagate includes in order to make contact. In our testing, it managed to transfer files at upwards of 40MB/sec when attached to a USB 3.0 system, which ain’t half bad for a drive that’s powered via USB and slimmer than a pencil. It’ll hit US retailers on August 5th, and at just $99, you know you’ll be picking up two just for kicks and giggles.

Update: Seagate just pinged us with a clarification; it’ll start shipping today!

Continue reading Seagate starts shipping pencil-thin $99 GoFlex Slim hard drive

Seagate starts shipping pencil-thin $99 GoFlex Slim hard drive originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Apr 2011 08:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments