WE RECOMMEND
- Sanwa's USB Mousepad Grows Card Reader, Webkey

- EagleTec USB microSDHC Reader is Nano Nano

- USB Flashlight/Card Reader Perfect for Spies and That's About It

- Sony 8GB M2 Flash Card with USB Reader

- Delkin ImageRouter USB CF Rack for Nat-Geo Pros

- Lexar Dual-Slot Reader Brings SDHC & UDMA CF Support

- Massive 28-in-1 Pro USB Card Reader

- Buffalo's Micro microSD USB Reader
Encrypting the contents on a flash card is something many users know the value of. If you lose your flash card any information on it will be easy for the finder to access and use if they so desire. That is where the Cipher UDD comes in, this device attaches to your PC via USB and has its own hardware encryption that is activated via a little dongle you plug into the front of the Cipher. Unless the dongle is plugged into the Cipher, your system will not recognize any flash card connected to the PC. The first time you plug a new device into the Cipher, it forces a reformat to operate and the files and folders on the flash card can only be seen under a Cipher environment. If someone finds your flash card, they only see encrypted garbage. There is no software to install on the host computer; the Cipher UDD does it all. The guys over at Techworld.com say it is a fantastic device. Encryption levels are 64-bit DES and 128-bit or 192-bit TDES. About Everything USB
USB technology is the de facto connectivity standard for PC peripherals & consumer electronics; it has evolved from USB 1.1 to USB 2.0, Wireless USB and USB 3.0. Everything USB takes an in-depth look at these products and other offbeat USB gadgets, and brings you information and reviews needed for you to make a purchase decision. Welcome and enjoy your stay. If you would like to contact us with a tip or comment, please write to: newstips@everythingusb.com
Subscribe to our RSS
Subscriber count: Over 9000!
Follow us on Twitter
Yea, we do microblogging now.
Subscriber count: Over 9000!
Yea, we do microblogging now.
Filed under Hardware
Thumbdrive Reviews
- Corsair Flash Voyager GT 128GB Flash Drive (2009)
- SanDisk Ultra Backup 32GB Flash Drive (2009)
- OCZ Slate USB SSD ExpressCard (2009)
- Kanguru e-Flash eSATA+USB 16GB Flash Drive (2009)
- Kingston Data Traveler 150 32GB USB Flash Drive (2008)
- Corsair Flash Voyager Mini Flash Drive (2008)
- Ironkey 1GB Secure Flash Drive (2007)
- OCZ ATV Turbo 4GB Flash Drive (2007)
- Corsair Flash Padlock 2GB Flash Drive (2007)
- SanDisk Cruzer Contour 4GB Flash Drive (2007)
- Corsair Flash Survivor GT 8GB Flash Drive (2007)
- Corsair Flash Voyager GT 4GB Flash Drive (2007)
- Kingston DataTraveler Secure 4GB Flash Drive (2006)
- SanDisk Cruzer Titanium 2GB Flash Drive (2006)
- Lexar JumpDrive Mercury 1GB Flash Drive (2006)
More USB Flash Drives
- Corsair Flash Voyager Mini - Small in Size, Big in Storage
- Dunhill Bulldog (The Sophisticated - And Expensive - USB Drive)
- USB-based ExpressCard SSD - Instant Storage for Your Lappy
- Case Study for Nexcopy USB Flash Drive Duplicator (ADS)
- Keep Your Flash Drive in Your Pocket (New WUSB Idea)
- Ironkey 'Secure Flash Drive' Now Available in 8GB
- Virtual Console 60-port Flash Drive Duplicator Breaks New Record
- Sandisk Cruzer Enterprise = RSA SecurID + 256-bit HW AES
- Imation Atom Flash Drive. Perhaps Subatomic to Follow?
- IronKey Personal 1GB Secure Flash Drive Review
- Corsair Flash Padlock Not So Secure... (The Dutch Said it)
- Nexcopy Flash Drive Duplicator Does More Than Just Duplicate
- Swarovski Engagement Rings for USB Geeks (Insane!)
- Credit Card Flash Drive? Not Quite. See for Yourself
- Buffalo Halts Sales of Flash Drives in USA (Blames SanDisk)
- Rent Movies… On Your Flash Drive
- Microsoft StartKey, Replacement for U3?
- Mickey Mouse 2GB Flash Drive is a Speed Demon
- Buffalo Scraps Plans for External USB SDD Outside Japan
- Mimoco's New Star Wars-themed Thumbdrives (in Limited Quantity)
- Digital Albums Starting to Pop Up on Flash Drives
- Intel, Micron's Next-Gen NAND for USB 3.0
- eBoostr - Vista's ReadyBoost Makes it to XP, Sorta
- Delkin ImageRouter USB CF Rack for Nat-Geo Pros
- Buffalo Turbo Charges Flash Drives for Last Time Before USB 3.0
- Domino Drive Design with a Focus on the Artistic
- Keeping the Earth in Mind With the USB EarthDrive
- Kingston Expands HyperX Line in Unexpected Ways
- Lexar's Enterprise-grade Thumbdrive (256-bit HW AES, PKI, Smart Card...)
- Sandisk Cruzer Titanium Plus (HW Encryption in, U3 out)










