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Play.com 8GB USB Flash Drive / Ready Boost Enabled
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Play.com 8GB USB Flash Drive / Ready Boost Enabled

Customer rating on Play.com 8GB USB Flash Drive / Ready Boost Enabled: 4.5 out of 5 stars ( 82 customer ratings )

Specifications

 

  • Replacement for your floppy disks, Zip drives and CD-Rs
  • Read Speed: 10.5MB/S (70X)
  • Write speed: 7.24MB/s (48X)
  • No drivers needed for Windows 2000/ME and XP and MacOS 8.6 or later, 9.X and 10.1.2 or above
  • Features:
  • Transfer data between school , office and home in style.
  • Slim, stylish design for easy use
  • Fits onto your key ring
  • USB 2.0 and 1.1 compliant
  • 2 Year Warranty

Description

 

The Play.com Flash Drive is a fast and easy way to transfer data between computers in style.

The Play.com Flash Drive from Play.com makes it easy to quickly save and transport your important data. Users can transfer documents, pictures, movie clips and music to other computers with a USB port.

Customer Reviews

 

Customer rating on Play.com 8GB USB Flash Drive / Ready Boost Enabled: 4.5 out of 5 stars

Average rating (82 reviews)

Customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars 8Gb flash drive

maudie57 | 22/11/2009 | See all maudie57's reviews (1) »

Bought this recently and have been really impressed with how fast it works. Ended up buying more for my kids.
Great value too!!

Customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars Flash Drive Storage

Llexuss | 08/11/2009 | See all Llexuss' reviews (1) »

Hey everyone who complains about being conned on memory capacity this why,

Your hard drive is advertised as having a 60GB capacity, but your computer shows only 55.8GB. What gives? The discrepancy is the result of having two methods of measuring memory. Computers are binary, or "base two," mathematical systems, and in a binary world a kilobyte is 1024 bytes (2 to the 10th power). When computers were new, the geekerati referred to this as a "kilo." Noncomputer folks, however, understood kilo to mean thousand, and thought that 1000 bytes should equal a kilobyte. So, two different measurements of hard drive space were born. In 1998, the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) weighed in, defining 1 "gigabyte" as 1 billion bytes. Hard disk manufacturers agree, marketing their products using the rounder decimal value instead of the binary system. So, your drive is labeled as decimal ("giga") and your PC reads binary (IEC's term, "gibi"). Either way, you're getting the same bunch of bytes.

Customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars Great

Gussie | 14/10/2009 | See all Gussie's reviews (4) »

Well worth it. Works well and 8Gb for £10.99 doesn't get any better.