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For LaCie Rugged mini USB 3.0, 433 customer reviews collected from 3 e-commerce sites, and the average score is 4.

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18.7.2018

Read all the way to the end for the full picture here :LaCie is a long-running brand name in (expensive) external drives, and as the first one I've owned I have to say I'm pretty underwhelmed for the price. The drive is bundled with an external power adaptor (more on this in a minute; already that's bad news), a pile of wall-socket adaptors for the UK, USA and most of Europe, a spare dust cover for the exposed sockets, an orange USB-C to USB-C cable, and a plain black USB3.1/3.0 to USB-C cable. The rugged aspect I'm less concerned about as I generally don't go around dropping or kicking expensive electronics. As a side note, the supplied cables & power adaptor aren't very long,so you'll need to be quite near a socket.I tested this with a new (5 months old) custom high-end gaming PC build - a Coffee Lake i7 8700K on an ASUS Strix Z370-G motherboard with 16GB of DDR4. I have two SSDs installed - a Sandisk 512GB and a Crucial M4 256GB; boot times for this machine are under 30 seconds from cold on the Z370 chipset.In theory, installing the LaCie is very easy - you boot up your PC, connect the cables, and that's largely it - the drive will be ready for storage (3.68TB formatted). For a kick off, my PC's front and rear USB3.0 connectors don't supply enough juice to power the drive, so there goes your portability right away - unless you've got native USB-C ports on your PC or Mac, you need a wall-socket. This is hugely disappointing for a start. Once you start it up, you're informed that the drive is dual-formatted (ExFAT) for Mac and PC, and that "optimising" it for one or the other will require reformatting which will wipe the contents - which are all first-time setup utilities. If you're not an experienced user, you'll want to think twice here (the first-time setup utilities will also try to flog you data-backup subscriptions). After I "optimised" the drive, I didn't notice any difference in performance. I copied a few 2.5GB files onto the drive and got write-speeds of 27mb/sec with bursts up to 35mb/sec - so it's roughly as fast as a USB flash drive. The card reader is standard SD, so you'll need an adaptor if you want to use any microSD flash cards - an adaptor isn't supplied with the drive, BTW.I've never been a fan of systray utilities using up my RAM, and the LaCie has at least 2 that can do this for you - RAID utilities (more on this in a sec) and....some....other.....thing that shouldn't be necessary as really, all you should need is file explorer for basic file backups - You can, however, set them up not to start at boot, which is a reasonable compromise. The drive is apparently two HDs pre-configured in RAID-0 (I got this from reading the box, and there really needs to be some supplied documentation to help you out here), which emphasises drive speed but leaves you vulnerable to losing everything if one of the pair ever fails. It also means I'll need to install the RAID manager software to either split the drives or reconfigure it into RAID-1 instead, although I suppose this means it's actually 2x4TB HDs as RAID-0 requires two identical drives to work and doesn't stack the drive sizes.EDIT : I have played around with this drive and gotten very different results from initially directly out of the box.Inside the casing is two, 2TB drives - presumably Seagate Barracudas, from some reading around, although I don't know the exact model. I used LaCie's RAID manager software (downloadable from their support page) and have rebuilt the drive as both RAID-0 and RAID-1 for testing. You can also configure it as two coimpletely independent drives in JBOD ("Just a bunch of disks") mode. Whenever you do this, you're warned the rebuild will erase everything and you'll need a pin to depress a tiny reset button on the front of the drive next to the power socket.In RAID-0 mode, you get a single 4TB partition - contrary to what I thought, you get the sum of the drives (although as RAID-0 striping puts half the data on one drive and half on the other, this still doesn't add up in my mind, but still). Writing to and copying from the RAID-0 partition after installing the management software, I got much faster speeds than previously - about 230mb/s, or 10x as fast as the first time I used it.In RAID-1 mode, the drive shows up as two mirrored 2TB drives (1.86TB formatted each). Read & write speeds were about half what I got in RAID-0 mode; about 130mb/sec.In light of all this, I've added a star, but there should really be a bit more advice available in the box - specifically, there's still no downloadable manual, little info on specs, and it's really rather important that after the first time you install this drive, you reboot and install the RAID manager. By default, in RAID-0, if one of the internal drives fails, you still lose everything, and I'd think it's quite important to tell users this - if you didn't know any better, you'd just see a single 4TB partition. And, I'm still disappointed that this isn't fully bus-powered if you're using USB3.0 or above (= minus 1 star).
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17.7.2018

This contains two hard drives in a rugged enclosure, that is certified to withstand dust, water and drops of up to 1.2 m. The certification also covers being run over by a 1000 kg car, which is fine if you drive a Fiat 500 but anything much bigger such as a Ford Fiesta now weighs well over 1100 kg…This device comes with a fluorescent orange cover that should ensure it is easy to find even when used in the most remote locations.If it is used with Thunderbolt or USB-C leads, these provide a power supply to the drive as well as a very high speed data connection. If it is used with a standard USB port, it will also need a power supply from the supplied external AC power adaptor,which helpfully comes with a wide range of connections that permits use around the world.I plugged the LaCie Rugged RAID Pro into the USB-C socket of my 2017 MacBook Pro. An orange light appeared on the Drive and an orange Lacie icon appeared in Finder. A “Start_Here_Mac”app appears. This starts with a Product Registration page, reformatted the drive into MacOS Extended format to optimise its use with my Mac. and then downloaded Toolkit software for backing up media cards.I then decided to partition the drive so it could also act as a Time Machine Backup. As my MacBook Pro has a 512 GB capacity, 1 TB is ideal, leaving 3 TB for my photographs. There are many file formats. My MacBook Pro disk uses APFS (Apple File System) but this only works on SSDs or Flash so not suitable for this drive. The LaCie system had already reformatted the drive into MacOS Extended, which was the former standard for all Mac drives and is also known as HFS+. I found that the Disk Utility wouldn’t allow me to create a partition on the LaCie Drive using MacOS Extended. I therefore re-formatted it to create a 1 TB partition using the MacOS Extended, case-sensitive, journaled encrypted format just for my Time Machine Backups.My main use for this drive is to store a copy of original RAW files as they are uploaded into Lightroom CC and thence copied into the Adobe Cloud. This allows my MacBook Pro to work on the original files locally when editing. With my previous LaCie Porsche design USB-C drive, LaCie STFD2000400 2 TB Porsche Design USB 3.1 (USB-C + USB 3.0) Portable 2.5 Inch External Hard Drive for PC and Mac, Silver, , the process of uploading files from the Sandisk Extreme Pro SD card into Lightroom was slow to justify taking a lunch break whilst the process was in action. Having an integral SD card reader in the drive is ideal for my workflow as a photographer.This drive is so much faster than its predecessor: there is barely time to boil a kettle let along enjoy a cup of coffee. I copied 313 Canon CR3 RAW files in 289 seconds. They contained a total of 9,827 MB of data, giving a transfer rate of 34 MB/seconds for each file to be downloaded from the SD card, processed within Lightroom and then uploaded onto the LaCie Rugged RAID Pro drive.This is a superb quality drive that is blisteringly fast – to get any faster you would need a Solid State Drive, which are far more expensive and usually come with a maximum of 2 TB capacity e.g. SanDisk Extreme 900 1.92 TB Portable Solid State Drive SSD up to 850 MB/s. For my use, this drive is just perfect
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15.1.2019

Thought I'd redress the poor three star overall rating this drive had in Jan of 2019... it deserves better.I have a Apple Mac with USB3 ports.... (also thunderbolt which are Thunderbolt 2) but I'll be upgrading soon and the new Macs have only got USB-C - so this drive will be compatible for a while on this basis. Meanwhile, if you have USB3 ports (which most people do am guessing) then this drive works perfectly. The cable it ships with is USB-C to standard USB so this is a highly compatible drive generally. These cables are available everywhere for buttons if you wanted some spares....Try not to get confused about Thunderbolt. Thunderbolt 3 uses the USB-C connectors - so I'm guessing some people are tripping up on this.This drive it seems won't perform to Thunderbolt 3 standards, since they don't say it will - but USB-C (which I think is sometimes called 3.1) is already very fast - so this is perfect for people using video and photo storage. I'm a professional photographer by the way that does a lot of video stuff too. This drive is ideal!This is a BUS powered drive, so this is again very good for field operators - It's portability and padded drive protection are good and I've got other versions of this design including a TB2 one from years back, and it's not died on me. Can't say so much for the 4TB bus powered USB3 Seagate drives I also bought. I've had to say goodbye to three of these already since they just seized up... causing me some interesting backup shenanigans! I've also lost a couple of WD drives over the years and I own about 10 other Lacie desktop drives - most of which have never fallen over on me.Lacie are a proven and industry standard manufacturer and this drive, being 5TB is also a cut above in terms of storage to its competitors. I would always advise everyone to keep at least two copies of everything in two separate places... all drives do eventually die folks.This world is constantly changing with speed and storage but right now, but this drive is the best in terms of price, compatibility, portability and reliability.The photo looks correct to me by the way (some say this is the Thunderbolt version) either Amazon have changed the image since these people commented, or there's something I'm not seeing.... but, as previously mentioned, TB3 uses a USB-C connector anyway...
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7.3.2017

I have a slightly uneasy relationship with external hard drives, lulled into a state of permanent trust, and forgetting that all the ones I have had seem to have a limited shelf-life, as far as automatic, continuous back up is concerned. And I'm not sure i expect the LaCie to be any different - especially as, like others, its guarantee is 2 yrs.I think something ,must go down the drain as far as software is concerned, meaning that for continuous, I seem to need to get a new drive every couple of years, after discovering that though seeming to be working, in fact, manual synching or back up needs to be done, around that 2 year mark. I've had that with Seagate, I've had that with Western Digital.Nor am I a clumsy user - I generally only travel good old fashioned memory sticks for presentation work, in someone else's laptop and projector set-up. So a back-up hard drive generally is permanently connected to the PC.What i like about the LaCie is of course its big memory. Far larger than my needs.And the fact that it comes with two types of cables - one with the normal USB connector end and one for no doubt more sophisticated up to date machines - USB-C. It is absolutely simple to Plug and Play. You can (and I did) down load software (which will of course use up some of the memory) to get 'Genie Time Line' so that back up happens continuously. The software is simple, and you get options for preferences , clearly explained. The user gets a choice of formats, so if you want to use this between PCs and Macs, you choose different saving settings (NFTS, FAT) . Certainly it was a much smoother initial set-up that my current Western Digital. It didn't seem particularly fast transfer though.What I don't like, given that it's rugged claim is designed for portability, is the open mini USB port. Slung in a backpack or similar, its surely going to end up full of the kind of detritus which accumulates. A rubberised seal would have been a good touch. It's rather larger than my WD, and is likely to be used more as a regular backup schedule, than stay permanently plugged in. So ruggedness is fine, it will be slung away in a drawer
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29.8.2018

This 2 TB external drive is specially designed for drone users who generate gigabytes of data from 4K video that can literally be backed up in the field. However, it is equally useful for those who generate high quantities of data through stills or video using earthbound cameras!Unlike my other LaCie drives, it has a built-in chargeable battery and comes complete with an external AC adapter and choice of four international plug fittings for UK, Europe, USA and Australasia.I downloaded the Copilot BOSS software onto my iPhone X, connected it to the LaCie drive using the supplied Lightning cable and updated the device firmware to v1.0.34.1.The groove in the side of the shock-protection cover allows this cable to be wrapped around the drive when not in use, even when the waterproof cap is replaced. Very neat, although it only comes with one cap unless the LaCie Rugged which has two in the box.I then inserted a 64GB Sandisk Extreme Pro SD card into the slot. The iPhone app asked me whether I wanted to copy the files onto the drive. According to the app, it was averaging around 100 MB/s. Usefully, the top of the drive then displayed the battery status, rate of file transfer and the number of files copied out of the total number of files. This created a new folder on the drive, which was labelled with the number generated by the date and time of copying. In total, it took 4’ 46” to copy 857 RAW files with 27 GB of data, which works out at an average of 94 MB/s, which is the exact rate quoted on the front of the Sandisk SD card. Very impressive.The drive comes with both USB-C to USB-C and USB-C to USB-A leads for use with older or more modern MacBooks and PCs. The display on the drive shows a picture of a computer to confirm the status of the connection.This drive is an ideal solution for backup when on location, particularly when using devices that have a single card drive. The combination of a display on the drive and information app on the iPhone gives plenty of reassurance that copying has taken place successfully. It is not the cheapest drive but it is really well put together and built to last.
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24.3.2012

This is my 2nd portable hard drive and seems like the best! Working absolutely fine, faster and password protected area is just wonderful. General formatting for Windows took around 7-8 minutes for entire 1TB but password protection encrypted area for 200GB formatting took around 3 hours; however it is one of best function which can be dismounted any time or can be configured to dismount if idle for whatever time you specify though normal area/unprotected area is always connected unless you disconnect it physically.When you first plug-in it will give you three option to format 1. Windows 2. Mac or 3. Lynux.Only limitation here is it won't allow you to partition the Hard Drive which is not a big deal as it can be resolved by making several folders however after the formatting is successfully done then it can be password protected for the size you want. In my case I did 200GB. This protected area is 256 bit encrypted which is very good I guess one of the best industry standard ensured security. By the way no one should make the whole of this hard drive password protected because in that case you cannot use or access this drive in every computer because to access this password protected are you need to run pr-eloaded .exe file which cannot be run unless you are administrator or Power user for that computer i.e. in offices computers are restricted so you cannot access restricted area and if the whole external hard drive is password protected than no meaning of portability . The unprotected area can be access anywhere you want as like any other USB Drive. I am using USB 2.00 though it is absolutely faster i.e. selected whole of 18 GB of documents which transferred around 15 minutes in one go and very quiet, no noise at all. Do hope and pray that price of this product would come down and very soon the company would make 5 TB in the same physical size. Hope it would last long. I would highly recommend this product, without any question you can buy it.
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4.3.2017

1TB of ruggedness I guess, the drive is surrounded by a rubber sleeve and a protective aluminium shell. Looks smart and comes with two cables a USB-C cable and USB 3.0 cable. It’s early days but so far it’s done everything I’ve asked of it which is mainly acting as a tertiary backup for my photos and music files. I noticed other models come with a plate to put over the USB port but this one doesn’t which is a shame. After running the set up - (I set it up for Windows PC use only as I don't tend to use MACs), if you take into account the LaCie software and a couple of folders it installed - I had 930 gb of space to use so not really 1tb. It comes with option to load additional software e.g.automatic backup but I haven’t loaded any further software to my PC as I don’t intend to use it on a daily basis. It’ll be used to backup my stuff once in a while and then disconnected and brought out once every couple of weeks to update if I have added any new files I need to save – as I say it’s an extra backup on top of the one I use already on a Seagate Drive (so that’s the original files on my PC hard drive, an initial backup on the Seagate and further backup on the LaCie...I’m a bit old school and cloud security still bothers me a little - I also prefer to have one drive I can disconnect ... talk about over cautious!). So the fact that it might be stuffed in a drawer or lying about somewhere really makes it’s ruggedness a big plus. As a note it says on the box shock resistant to 1.2m and also has rain resistance. Speed wise it wasn’t as fast as I expected it took 16 mins using USB 3 to move 64gb of picture files directly from the PC hard drive hitting an average of 60-70 mbs after a promising start of 130mbs – whereas the Seagate drive took half the time, it started at 120mbs and kept around 100-120 mark for the bulk of the transfer - using the same port on the PC.But as I say it does what I ask of it so I’m pretty happy with it.
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24.7.2018

There's lots to like about this drive - and a couple of irritating points, enough to drop a star.Firstly, transfer speeds are good. Almost as good as the stated speed, when using USB 3.0. If you look at the photos you will see two screenshots. The slower one (173 MB/s) is when copying from a traditional hard disk drive to this LaCie. The faster speed (320MB/s) is copying from an SSD to this drive. This indicates to me that this drive is very quick at writing and was bottle-necked by the read speed of the source drive in the first speed test. Both tests were for a single 2GB mp4 file, of the type you might upload to YouTube (and hence want to backup).So far so good. The unit is protected by its garish,orange rubbery sleeve, not unattractive but not exactly demure either. It's not huge at around 13cm x 9cm x 3cm, but you wouldn't want to put this in your shirt pocket, it's too heavy for that.So why only 4 stars?A minor gripe is USB-C connector on the device, that is insufficient to power the device even when plugged directly into a USB 3.0 socket on my PC, so you HAVE to use the plug-in power supply.A major gripe is that the supplied plug-in power supply (5.4v @ 2A) has a lead so short that even during this limited testing in my workshop I had to use an extension lead as I could not connect it to a power socket and my PC from across the workbench. This absolutely requires a 3m lead.Also, I'm wondering why it's using a 5.4v supply when we have zillions of phone chargers to hand giving out a healthy 5v and 2A (or even more) using a standard micro USB plug. Proprietary plugs and power voltages are all very well but don't have a place in portable computer peripherals.The drive performs well, very well, but is let down by the ridiculous power supply lead length - try using this in a hotel room with the power socket on one side of the room and you on the bed with this unit. Come on, LaCie, sort it out.
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1.3.2017

*************************UPDATE*************************I've been wanting to get a rugged portable USB drive for ages, so really wanted to like this drive. Unfortunately, the transfer speed really lets it down.In the box, you get:- 1 x USB-C to USB cable- 1 x USB-C to USB-C cable- 1 x Lacie driveOn plugging the drive into your computer, you are presented with a tiny 256MB drive. In order to access the whole drive, you have to run the setup tool on that 256MB drive to partition and format the drive. You are offered the option to use FAT32 for wider compatibility, or NTFS for optimised speed. For the sake of this review, I chose to partition half the drive in FAT32, and the other half NTFS.This is done all within the setup utility, by way of a slider bar. This is very easy, albeit bit slow and unnecessary in my opinion.Once the drives are ready for use, I did a few tests simply by copying some large files from Windows 10 to the Lacie drive over USB3. For comparisons, I also copied the same files to a WD My Passport Ultra drive that I also own.Unfortunately, the transfer speed of the Lacie over USB3 really let it down in this compartment.A 200MB file copy maxed out at around 29MB/s, compared to around 45MB/s on the WD.A 3.8GB file copy maxed out at 31.5MB/s on the NTFS partition, 29.4MB/s on the FAT32 partition, compared to 93MB/s on the WD My Passport.I'd admit this is a very rough test, and not completely representative, even so, I did not expect a 3rd of the speed of the WD when copying a large file. At the time of review, I did not have a USB-C device to test it with, maybe, just maybe that would be faster?*************************UPDATE Nov 2017*************************I reformatted the drive using Windows 10's Windows Explorer and it's now giving me 103MB/s write speed! I have therefore changed the rating to 4 stars! 1 star taken off for the native format being so slow.
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27.2.2017

As soon as I plugged this in it worked straight away and the icon came up on my PC as Laci which is the brand of course. The drive itself is made of metal front and back with a orange rubber protection around the edges which means if you accidently drop it its still going to work in most cases especially if it lands on the rubber part.There was a text file which read that I had to run the setup software before I could use the drive which I did and my security software Norton whipped if off thinking it was a virus lol. Anyway I restored this on to my desktop and copied it back to the drive. Unfortunately I couldn't get this setup program to work so I unplugged my other USB drive to save myselfaccidently erasing it which is a good idea and went into windows 10 disk management as the drive is not showing the true capacity. In disc management you have to format the drive part where it says "unallocated drive space" right click this and format the drive as NTFS this will only take a short while if you have quick format clicked which is all you need to format a new drive. Make sure you choose a drive letter as well which is different from any other drives you have to avoid a mix up. After doing this you can then use the drive and access the full memory. You will loose about 257MB if its a 1TB drive but this happens to all drives as you need some data to make the drive work and this will show up as USED space. In the package you get 2 cables one for USB-C type to USB-C and one for USB C type from the drive to USB 3.0 and it will also work on USB 2.0 though a lot slower. I don't know why but most drive manufacturers pre format their drives but I hope this has been helpful to you if your new to this type of thing.
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21.7.2016

Great device for extra storage. I recently purchased a MacBookPro but it only had 128GB storage as I edit photos this wouldn't work out. So I already had in mind an external drive.The LaCie is simple and easy to use. Just plug in and drag and drop files onto it. Check they have copied, then dump files off your hard drive.I've had LaCie drives in the past and never experienced any failures.The unit is small and compact. It comes well packed and supplied with a USB 3.0 cable! YES CABLE INCLUDED. I emphasise this as the description doesn't lead you to believe this: yet Amazon encourage you to buy one - or at least it suggests others buy a USB cable.Tips for set up. If you want to register your drive as part of the set up.Then pull back the rubber bumper at the end the cable plugs in. (Not when attached to the computer) this is where the serial number is.When you plug it in you'll get a nice icon on your desktop (like pictured) and use the quick start icon to set it up.Remember when you've finished copying and done. Then click on the LaCie drive icon and drag to your trash bin to eject. If you fail to eject the drive it can possibly cause problems.It also appears to be a moving hard drive, I wasn't sure if this when I bought it. Not that it bothers me massively as its sold as a rugged drive. However the next purchase will be solid state as no moving parts. Aside from this for the price you can't go wrong. I wouldn't buy a cheaper drive as it is your data you are backing up / storing!
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19.3.2017

Unlike the other reviewers present who seem to have experienced problems with the cable and the robustness of this LaCie product, in this humble abode, this mini hard drive sits quietly at the back of the I Mac beavering away merrily. Frankly. I did not need a portable hard disk to take the beach and get covered in sand. As such this works perfectly well as a static back disc. Indeed, after using it for a couple of weeks linked to Time Machine it is backing up nicely and storing all songs from I-Tunes as a database. Having previous used "My Passport for Mac" this LaCie drive has much bigger storage and was easy to install. Whether it needed to be the colour of tangerine is obviously a matter of personal taste,although they happily provide two connector cables one orange and one black so the choice is yours. Having accidently dropped it at one point it survived the fall and bounced along the floor happily. To this reviewer at least it does feel more robust than the average hard drive and while a bit pricey in terms of exceeding the £100 mark there are no complaints to report this end.
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13.3.2017

Only downside I can mention is that in many years of using portable drives with my Macs is that size doesn't seem to increasing??Never the less, this is a rugged device and I can vouch for it. Formatted the drive journaled on my MacBook Pro and then added a good few Gb of photos and music to it. It's so far been left in a very hot sunny greenhouse, dropped from a table a couple of times and the drive still works perfectly. The rubber edging has also not damaged if you are to throw this in a large bag the added benefit is that you're not going to damage anything else in the bag from a edge or corner of the drive due to its padding.Perhaps having the cable being able to further protect the drive by having a cable wrap around the outer would be a good design going forward,it's one of those issues where you have your computer and drive in your bag plus a few cables, which invariably get tangled up or in some cases forgotten!Huge recommendation if you are the out and about kind of person or are occasionally clumsy. This will take some abuse...
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30.7.2018

I am not a professional content creator, but I still see a massive advantage working with this external hard drive.+ The exterior is made from a rubbery and durable construction that is still stylish and aesthetically pleasing+ It comes with a multiplicity of connector cables, so you should be able to use it with most phones, laptops and drones+ the screen makes it easy to manage, organise and delete work on the hard drive if necessary and it means that you don't necessarily have to work with a laptop when shooting video+ the storage capacity is 2 terabytes and should cover up to around 60 hours of video and it is a lot that can be stored and managed on the hard drive instead of slowing downcomputers or laptops.+ it comes with a data recovery rescue service for 3 years and access to the Adobe creative cloud for 1 month.Pretty much a perfect tool for content creators and it's super easy to use and doesn't take up a lot of space. It's not cheap, but it's high quality and eases work in the field.
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11.4.2017

First of all this drive feels sturdy and well-made. It comes with two leads, one for miniUSB-to-miniUSB, the other is USB3-to-miniUSB.The orange rubbery rim can actually be removed if you prefer to make it more compact, but obviously you lose the protective – and highly visible - element if you do.I didn’t try kicking it around the room or anything but one would hope it’s been thoroughly tested of the sturdiness it claims to have.In terms of use, it won’t let you use or ‘see’ the drive on your computer unless you run the Lacie software, although I was able to uncheck various boxes and skip registration so it wasn’t too painful.Via USB3 it copied over 2.56GB of data from a Windows PC in 78 seconds.I haven’t used it very much yet,but it appears to be what it says on the tin and certainly it’s my first choice for moving a large amount of data around, or it would be good if you worked off a laptop in a relatively small space and wanted something to backup onto that wasn’t vulnerable.
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