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Storage
Pockey USB 2.0 External Disk Drive
Don Bradbury considers what miniaturisation
can do for disk drives
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Product |
40GB
Pockey HDD |
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From |
Flotec
Engineering Inc |
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Web site |
www.pockeyeurope.com
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RRP |
£279
+ VAT for 40GB version |
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Rating |
8.5 |
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Likes |
Pocketable,
fast, simple to install |
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Dislikes |
Possible
need for PS/2 power, rather expensive |
Until recently,
external USB disk drives were relatively large, and they required
their own power supply unit since the data transfer interface could
not deliver sufficient current. USB, for instance, provides up to
500mA, and that, generally, is insufficient to power a disk drive.
Now Think
Distribution are marketing the Pockey range of external drives,
based on Fujitsu, IBM, or Hitachi 2.5 inch drive technology, with
various capacities but all interfacing with the new USB 2.0
connectivity medium (backwards compatible with USB 1.1, though
without the speed advantages of course).
We looked at
the 40GB variant. Smart in silver and black, capable of running
under versions 98/98SE/ME/2000/XP of Windows (only the first two
requiring access to the driver CD), or on Macs. Small enough to be
pocketable, very quiet, hot-swappable - but demount for safety - and
in general very convenient since there’s no need for a PSU.
A mere 7.5% of
the volume, and requiring only 30% of the desktop acreage of the
same-capacity Maxtor 3000LE external drive we reviewed recently, and
simply attached through the USB cable, the Pockey drive was
eminently usable. It would be found especially so by notebook users
on the road who need the pocketability and quick preparation.
Installation
On our trial
notebook the Pockey Drive installed and ran by simply plugging it
into a spare USB 2.0 hub port. On our trial desktop PC, however,
plugging in and switching the Pockey drive on rebooted the PC. That
port was clearly incapable of meeting the peak current-draw demands
of the drive.
For such
eventualities, the Pockey piggy-backs the USB lead with a PS/2
attachment, your mouse or whatever, that may run from the same port,
still functioning normally when you plug that in the back.
That might
constitute a minor irritation, especially for those who want to
attach and remove the drive on a frequent basis from such a machine,
but it’s still better than having to lug a PSU around. Some PCs will
provide the required current via USB while others will not. That’s
when you must use the PS/2 attachment.
Throw the switch
When all is set
up and you throw the switch on the rear of the unit, the drive
automatically assumes the next available drive letter on the PC, and
away you go. Use it for whatever purpose you have in mind; whole
drive or partition Ghosting, file or folder backup, storing MP3
files, digital pictures, video files, DVD movies or games, business
presentations (in PowerPoint perhaps), or simply system expansion.
Copying
20GB of data files from the aforementioned Maxtor disk, with both
drives connected via USB 2.0, took place at a rate of 5.7MB/sec;
nowhere near the theoretical maximum for USB 2.0, but far faster
than could be achieved via USB 1.1. As we’ve pointed out before,
several factors are involved in the rate of data transfer, not just
the theoretical speed of the port.
The Pockey’s
power LED also functions as the read/write activation LED, flashing
green/red, and that’s around the rear of the drive. Most will not
bother about that; for those who do, you can just have the unit
facing away from you. There’s nothing fixed about this unit’s
orientation.
Totally
enclosed in it’s silver Aluminium housing, with no apparent
ventilation for the disk or electronics, the unit ran just mildly
warm on top of a monitor shelf.
In conclusion
Complete with a
smart black carrying case, and just the USB lead in tow, the Pockey
drives are very suitable for anyone who needs portable storage
expansion for PC systems. Just plug in and switch it on.
Perhaps a tad
expensive if mobility is not your main requirement, the 20-60GB
capacities in the Pockey range are bound to appeal to many who need
that portability factor, and some who don’t but want small, light,
but capacious system expansion.
A dual
interface USB 2.0 and Firewire version is understood to be in the
pipeline; some may choose to wait for that, in the meantime saving
up for the extra it will surely cost.
Don Bradbury
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