CNET editors' review
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CNET editors' rating:
stars
Very good
Detailed editors' rating
- Reviewed on: 12/22/2004
- Released on: 09/02/2004
The white-plastic case with chrome accents makes for an elegant device that will blend right in with an Apple PowerBook or Sharp Actius MP30. At 4.2 ounces and measuring 0.6 by 2.8 by 3.7 inches, it is smaller than Apricorn's EZ Bus Mini drive and easily fits into a notebook pouch or a shirt pocket. The StoreJet comes with a 30-inch USB 2.0 cable, a padded case, and a mini CD that contains manuals, drivers, and programs for the drive.
Inside the StoreJet is a 1.8-inch Hitachi hard drive that spins at 4,200rpm and has a 2MB buffer. A blue LED shows that the unit is powered and blinks when data is flowing. Because it is powered through the USB cable, there's no power adapter to lug around. However, playing music from the StoreJet drained the battery on our IBM ThinkPad R50 28 minutes faster than doing the same task with the system's native drive, and 3 minutes sooner than with the EZ Mini.
If you have Windows Me, 2000, or XP, or Mac OS 9 or newer, setup is simple: just plug in the USB cable. The drive takes about a minute to set itself up as the next available drive letter. Windows 98 users will have to load the included drivers manually. No Linux drivers are available. The drive came formatted for FAT32, which we changed to NTFS, yielding 18.6GB of usable space (on the 20GB version), and it was able to read and write data at 72Mbps, or about 35 percent slower than the EZ Mini's throughput.
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