Stumbled across a deal for 10 64 GB USBs for 12 bucks. Figured it was so cheap that it can’t possibly hurt to have them, but now I’m wondering if they’re particularly useful for anyone?
That's very cheap, but possibly genuine if they're not off aliexpress or temu. First off check them with Validrive as someone else mentioned here.
You could put Kiwix on them and have an offline version of certain sites and manuals. You could fill them with music, My music collection is only about 4000 songs, at 16GB - that can then plug into other things, or play in a car, on TVs or other laptops or devices. Just a seperate backup. If it gets lost somewhere too - you'll find it again one day and it'll be like the mixtapes or the home-burnt CD you did as a teenager.
If you have photos and videos of family or friends you're close to, find some albums of old photos of you guys together and mail them as a cheap present. We're backing up some old camcorder footage from when me and my cousins were kids and will send them off as gifts. We're in our 30s now and they are parents.
Keep them as install drives for Linux or Windows recovery drives?
Not very big for videos, so not great for the *ahem* homework folder. BUT I have one that I've filled with movies. Then I bought a cheap projector and then can play adult content on the walls.
You can fit a lot of photos into 64GB so you can use a couple as partial backups and store them in the attic or another location. For the ultra-precious, irreplaceable data, like family photos etc. more backups makes it safer.
Or you can dedicate drives for certain series or TV shows or movies. Again not as sophisticated as a big fancy NAS, like lots of people here.
If you can get yourself some stickers as well for labelling whats on them, that will help too.
The data transfer speeds on these do tend to be slow, and in many ways it's obsolete compared to modern SSDs / HDDs. But there are plenty of use cases where a few cheap drives are portable and only need to be basic and simple. Easy to send through the mail too, less susceptible to physical damage.
I just bought 10 32GB sticks for $30. And I think it was a good deal. 64GB, 10 for $40. When something is less than 1/3 of a good price, it’s likely a fake. My other thought is that it’s 2.0 speed. And would take nearly 2 hours to transfer 64GB.
I've got some decent ones I regularly use that are 128GB
Stick ventoy on there and boot whatever.
Imho it's way worth it to spring for the better usb3 or above drives unless you're just giving them away.
What you've got I'd be using as install disks for os factory reinstalls.
Yeah yeah I could just use the clean windows iso I have on the ventoy drive but then I have to go hunt down the drivers whereas if I flash the original factory install on there it all just works.
Especially on a lot of the newer ones that require drivers just to see the NVMe drive to install in the first place.
I keep 2 around at all times. One with Ventoy loaded with windows and linux installers (this gets wiped and updated frequently) and a second for sneakernetting big files between my laptop and my pc. I have a few others floating around, but I usually just load those up with movies/concert bootlegs and give them to people.
Only to carry a few files or whatever from one PC to another. They are just too unreliable, get lost or damaged too easily and their performance almost always sucks.
I've found that 16-32GB is the sweet spot for flash/thumb drives as anything larger is a waste of money. If I need more then 32GB for a single file, then it's time to break out the external 2+ TB drive.
The main advantage is that 16GB are cheap and work well for Sneakernet file transfers