Advantages:
Compared to hard drives, flash
drives use little power, have no fragile moving parts, and for most capacities
are small and light. Data stored on flash
drives is impervious to mechanical shock, magnetic fields, scratches and dust.
These properties make them suitable for transporting data from place to place
and keeping the data readily at hand.
Flash
drives also store data densely compared to many removable media. In
mid-2009, 256 GB drives became available, with the ability to hold many times
more data than a DVD or even a Blu-ray disc,
Most personal computers support USB as of
2010. Flash drives implement the USB mass storage device class so that most
modern operating systems can read and write to them without installing device
drivers. The flash drives present a simple block-structured logical unit to the
host operating system, hiding the individual complex implementation details of
the various underlying flash memory devices. The operating system can use any
file system or block addressing scheme. Some computers can boot up from flash
drives.
Specially manufactured flash drives are
available that have a tough rubber or metal casing designed to be waterproof
and virtually "unbreakable". These flash drives retain their memory
after being submerged in water, and even through a machine wash. Leaving such a
flash drive out to dry completely before allowing current to run through it has
been known to result in a working drive with no future problems. Channel Five's
Gadget Show cooked one of these flash drives with propane, froze it with dry
ice, submerged it in various acidic liquids, ran over it with a jeep and fired
it against a wall with a mortar. A company specializing in recovering lost data
from computer drives managed to recover all the data on the drive. All data on
the other removable storage devices tested, using optical or magnetic
technologies, were destroyed.
Disadvantages:
Like all flash memory devices, flash drives
can sustain only a limited number of write and erase cycles before the drive
fails. unreliable source? This should be a consideration when using a flash
drive to run application software or an operating system. To address this, as
well as space limitations, some developers have produced special versions of
operating systems (such as Linux in Live USB) or commonplace applications (such
as Mozilla Firefox) designed to run from flash drives. These are typically
optimized for size and configured to place temporary or intermediate files in
the computer's main RAM rather than store them temporarily on the flash drive.
Most USB
flash drives no longer include a write-protect mechanism, although a small
number have a switch on the housing of the drive itself to keep the host
computer from writing or modifying data on the drive. Write-protection makes a
device suitable for repairing virus-contaminated host computers without risk of
infecting the USB flash drive itself. A write-locked SD card
in a USB flash card reader adapter is an effective way to avoid any writes on
the flash medium. The SD card as a WORM device has an essentially unlimited
life.
A drawback to the small size is that they
are easily misplaced, left behind, or otherwise lost. This is a particular
problem if the data they contain are sensitive (see data security). As a
consequence, some manufacturers have added encryption hardware to their
drives—although software encryption systems which can be used in conjunction
with any mass storage medium achieve the same thing. Most drives can be
attached to keychains, necklaces and lanyards. The USB plug is usually fitted
with a removable and easily lost protective cap, or is retractable.
USB flash drives are more expensive per
unit of storage than large hard drives, but are less expensive in capacities of
a few tens of gigabytes as of 2011. Maximum available capacity is increasing
with time, but is less than larger hard drives. This balance is changing, but
the rate of change is slowing.
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