Wednesday, June 17th 2009
Patriot Memory Launches 128 GB Xporter Magnum Flash Drive
Modern portable USB flash drives tend to become equal in capacity to solid-state drives, as Patriot Memory is today introducing its highest-capacity flash drive yet, the 128 GB Xporter Magnum. With more than twice the capacity of most USB drives, the Xporter Magnum features a USB 2.0 high speed interface, is Windows ReadyBoost ready, and provides read speed of up to 31 MB/s. Constructed with a durable water and shock resistant housing and backed by a lifetime warranty, the Xporter XT Boost ranks among the best offerings users can find. The 128 GB Patriot Xporter Magnum drive is yet to be priced.
Source:
TechConnect Magazine
9 Comments on Patriot Memory Launches 128 GB Xporter Magnum Flash Drive
do I still need a 2,5" protable?
Mine gets 30MB/s in many benchmarks - ATTO shows the true story, where its only fast with files larger than 64KB. anything smaller, and it drops BELOW 10KB/s. thats where readyboost and such like to call home, so anything that uses the drive for random read and writes is useless.
USB2 can still write at up to 30mb/second if your device supports it. If this flash drive only writes at 6~9mb/second , as do MANY Kingston drives that can read at about 30mb/s, then a USB 2.5" drive will still be able to write a LOT faster , as much as 25~31mb/second depending on the drive.
I would know, I have one that writes at about 28mb/s.
If you are actually COPYING +10Gb of data this will make a HUGE difference.
I am making a good few assumptions here, but just the same - just about any modern 2.5" ext drive will be able to read / write faster than USB/MAX today, and as such will read/write at USB's actual limit, where as MANY flash drives are still not capable of writing at even half of USB's top speed.
You're quoting kingston figures for a patriot drive.
These large flash drives are just the first gen SSD's with stutter bugs, thats why you see variants with E-sata ports built in. they're worthless IMO, until they come with E-sata and USB3.0 on the same drive.