USB flash drives are NAND-type flash memory data storage devices integrated with a USB interface. They are typically small, lightweight, removable and rewritable. Sizes range from 8 megabytes to several gigabytes, although as capacity increases, price does as well.
USB flash drives are faster, hold more data, and are generally more reliable than floppy disks, which were previously the norm for portable storage. These types of drives use the USB mass storage standard, supported natively by operating systems such as Linux (since the 2.4 kernel series*), Mac OS X, Mac OS 9, Windows XP, Windows 2000 and Windows Me.
Microsoft Windows 95 OSR2.1 through Windows 98 SE do not natively support USB mass storage devices *, though they do support USB. In order to use a USB flash drive with these versions of Microsoft Windows, a driver from the manufacturer must be installed. These drivers are generally available for Windows 98 but not for Windows 95. Mac OS 8.5.1 and up to Mac OS 9 supports USB mass storage devices through the use of an optional driver.
A flash drive consists of a small printed circuit board encased in a robust plastic or metal casing keyfob, or on a lanyard. Only the USB connector protrudes from this protection, and is usually covered by a removable cap. Most flash drives use a standard type-A USB connection allowing them to be connected directly to a port on a personal computer. Some small drives have been made with a thin plug designed to mate with a standard USB port [http://www.acp-ep.com/usb_keydrives20_photos.html" target="_blank" >*, but these are very rare.
Most flash drives are active only when powered by a USB computer connection, and require no other external power source or battery power source; they are powered using the limited supply afforded by the USB connection. To access the data stored in a flash drive, the flash drive must be connected to a computer, either by direct connection to the computer's USB port or via a USB hub. Some drives need most of the power a standard USB port can supply, and therefore cannot be used with a bus powered hub.
The first flash drives were made by M-Systems and distributed in Europe under the "disgo" * brand in sizes of 8 MB, 16 MB, 32 MB and 64 MB. These were marketed as "a true floppy-killer," and this design was continued up to 256 MB. Asian manufacturers soon started making their own flash drives that were cheaper than the Disgo series.
Modern flash drives have USB 2.0 connectivity. However, they do not currently use the full 480Mbit/s the specification supports due to technical limitations inherent in NAND flash.
Thumb drives have become iconic as a sort of "fashion statement", much like the iPod's white ear bud headphones. *).
| 1 | USB connector |
|---|---|
| 2 | USB mass storage controller device |
| 3 | Test points |
| 4 | Flash memory chip |
| 5 | Crystal oscillator |
| 6 | LED |
| 7 | Write-protect switch |
| 8 | Unpopulated space for second flash memory chip |
One end of the device is fitted with a single male type-A USB connector. Inside the plastic casing is a small printed circuit board. Mounted on this board is some simple power circuitry and a small number of surface-mounted integrated circuits (ICs). Typically, one of these ICs provides an interface to the USB port, another drives the onboard memory, and the other is the flash memory.
Flash drives are also a relatively dense form of storage, where even the cheapest will store dozens of floppy disks worth of data. Some can hold more data than a CD. Very high-end flash drives can even hold more data than a DVD.
Flash drives implement the USB mass storage device class, meaning that most modern operating systems can read and write to flash drives without any additional device drivers. Instead of exposing the complex technical detail of the underlying flash memory devices, the flash drives export a simple block-structured logical unit to the host operating system. The operating system can use whatever type of filesystem or block addressing scheme it wants. Some computers have the ability to boot up from flash drives.
Like all flash memory devices, flash drives can sustain only a limited number of write and erase cycles before failure. Mid-range flash drives under normal conditions will support several million cycles, although write operations will gradually slow as the device ages. 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) 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 memory rather than store them temporarily on the flash drive.
A few cheaper USB flash drives have been found to use unsuitable flash memory chips labelled as ROM USE ONLY - these are intended for tasks such as firmware for embedded devices rather than for continual rewrite use, and fail after a very small number of cycles. *
The FAT filesystem most commonly used on USB flash drives is subject to file fragmentation, much like magnetic storage devices. Excessive fragmentation on flash storage can have a negative impact on performance. *
Most USB flash drives do not employ a write-protect mechanism. Such a switch on the housing of the drive itself would keep the host computer from writing or modifying data on the drive. Write-protection would make a device suitable for repairing virus-contaminated host computers without infecting the USB flash drive itself.
Flash drives are more tolerant of abuse than mechanical drives, but can still be damaged or have data corrupted if an impact loosens circuit connections.
Some encryption applications (such as TrueCrypt, CryptoBuddy and Private Disk) allow running without installation. The executable files can be stored on the USB drive, together with the encrypted file image. The encrypted partition can be accessed on any computer running Microsoft Windows. Other flash drives allow the user to configure secure and public partitions of different sizes. Executable files for Windows, Macintosh, and Linux are usually included on the drive.
Newer flash drives support biometric fingerprinting to confirm the user's identity. As of mid-2005, this was a relatively costly alternative to standard password protection offered on many new USB flash storage devices.
Some manufacturers deploy physical authentication tokens in the form of a flash drive. These are used to control access to a sensitive system by containing encryption keys or, more commonly, communicating with security software on the target machine. The system is designed so the target machine will not operate except when the flash drive device is plugged into it. Some of these "PC lock" devices also function as normal flash drives when plugged into other machines.
Flash drives present a significant security challenge for large organizations. Their small size and ease of use allows unsupervised visitors or unscrupulous employees to smuggle confidential data out with little chance of detection. Equally, corporate and public computers alike are vulnerable to attackers connecting a flash drive to a free USB port and using malicious software such as rootkits or packet sniffers. To prevent this, some organizations forbid the use of flash drives, and some computers are configured to disable the mounting of USB mass storage devices by ordinary users, a feature introduced in Windows XP service pack 2; others use third-party software to control USB usage. In a lower-tech security solution, some organizations disconnect USB ports inside the computer or fill the USB sockets with epoxy.
All of the following names (optionally prefixed with "USB") have been used:
Floppy disks were the first publicly-popular method of file transport, but have essentially become obsolete due to their low capacity, low speed, and low durability. Virtually all new computers include USB ports, and many of them are now sold without a floppy drive, the Apple iMac being the first to ship this way. Floppy disks are still in use because of their low cost and ease of use with older systems. Attempts to extend the floppy standard (such as the Imation SuperDisk) were not successful because of a reputation for unreliablity and the lack of a single standard for PC vendors to adopt.
The Iomega Zip drive enjoyed some popularity, but never reached the point of ubiquity in computers. Also, the larger sizes of Zip-now up to 750MB-cannot be read on older drives. Unless one were to carry around an external drive, their usefulness as a means of moving data was rather limited. The cost per megabyte was fairly high, with individual disks often priced at $10 USD or higher. Because the material used for creating the storage medium in Zip disks is similar to that used in floppy disks, Zip disks have a higher risk of failure and data loss. Larger removable storage media, like Iomega's Jaz drive, had even higher costs, both in drives and in media, and as such were never feasible as a floppy alternative.
CD-R and CD-RW are swappable storage media alternatives. Unlike Zip and floppy drives, DVD and CD recorders are increasingly common in personal computer systems. CD-Rs can only be written to once, and the more expensive CD-RWs are only rated up to 1,000 erase/write cycles, whereas modern NAND-based flash drives often last for 500,000 or more erase/write cycles. Optical storage devices are also usually slower than their flash-based counterparts. Compact discs with an 11.5 cm diameter can also be inconveniently large and, unlike flash drives, cannot fit into a pocket or hang from a keychain. Smaller CDs are available, and these are an exception. There is also no standard file system for rewriteable optical media; packet-writing utilities like DirectCD and InCD exist, but produce discs that are not universally readable, despite claiming to be based on the UDF standard. The upcoming Mount Rainier standard addresses this shortcoming in CD-RW media, but is still not supported by most DVD and CD recorders or major operating systems.
In efforts to focus on increasing capacities, 64 MB and smaller capacity flash memory has been largely discontinued, and 128 MB capacity flash memory is being phased out. Kanguru has recently released a 64 GB flash memory drive that utilizes USB 2.0 and claims 10 years worth of information writing. *
Lexar is attempting to introduce a USB Flash Card [http://www.lexar.com/ufc/, which would be a compact USB flash drive intended to replace various kinds of flash memory cards.
SanDisk has introduced a new technology to allow controlled storage and usage of copyrighted materials on flash drives, primarily for use by students. This technology is termed FlashCP.
Computer storage devices | Solid-state computer storage media | USB
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