Price : Too low to display
Introducing Kingston’s DataTraveler 102 for quick and convenient storage, sharing and transferring of data. In capacities up to 8GB, the new DataTraveler 102 can store your favorite photos, music, school assignments and reports. It lets you carry all of your data with you, making it ideal for the office, home, school and wherever you travel. Available in four fun colors by capacity, DataTraveler 102 is backed by a five-year warranty, 24/7 tech support and legendary Kingston reliability.
This review is from : Kingston DataTraveler 102 - 8 GB USB 2.0 Flash Drive DT102/8GB
Great Product . I have other Kingston travel USB drives. I love their product.
The only thing I would say is the drive is a little thick, so
if you have a computer with very closely usb drive inputs, you can't put
another USB drive next to it. It takes up too much room.
Great Product . I have other Kingston travel USB drives. I love their product.
The only thing I would say is the drive is a little thick, so
if you have a computer with very closely usb drive inputs, you can't put
another USB drive next to it. It takes up too much room.
Kingston DataTraveler 102 - 8 GB USB 2.0 Flash Drive DT102/8GB Reviews
Great Flash Drive Product. . Pros:
Good Read/Write speeds for typical users (R:10MBps, W:5MBps based on its specs). Test Result will be uploaded as customer image(s) soon.
Smaller size than DataTraveler (not 102 series)
Plug-and-Play
Cons:
can't attach the cap to the other end of the drive
Thicker than DataTraveler (not 102 series)
Great Flash Drive Product. . Pros:
Good Read/Write speeds for typical users (R:10MBps, W:5MBps based on its specs). Test Result will be uploaded as customer image(s) soon.
Smaller size than DataTraveler (not 102 series)
Plug-and-Play
Cons:
can't attach the cap to the other end of the drive
Thicker than DataTraveler (not 102 series)
Kingston DataTraveler 102 - 8 GB USB 2.0 Flash Drive DT102/8GB Opinions
Don't lose your cap . Pretty straight forward. Throughput seems to be pretty quick. I wish the cap would snap onto the back like a magic marker. I mean, if people designing markers that you can buy a ten pack of at the dollar tree have enough intelligence to include that feature, why wouldn't this have that. It really isn't that big of a deal, but when you pay good money for anything, intelligent and ergonomic design shouldn't take a back seat.
Don't lose your cap . Pretty straight forward. Throughput seems to be pretty quick. I wish the cap would snap onto the back like a magic marker. I mean, if people designing markers that you can buy a ten pack of at the dollar tree have enough intelligence to include that feature, why wouldn't this have that. It really isn't that big of a deal, but when you pay good money for anything, intelligent and ergonomic design shouldn't take a back seat.
A good drive but needs some modifications . First, other reviewers are exactly right about the cap. It is very difficult to remove. Also, not being able to clip the cap to the other end of the USB drive is a real pain. Someone dropped the ball on that one.
However, two helpful hints in removing the cap. First, I took a nail file and gently filed down the raised edges that allow the cap to clip onto the body of the USB drive. be careful not to remove too much else you'll never get the cap to stay on. I think it is better for it to be too tight than too loose.
Also, the clips are on the longer portion of the cap, so if you hold the cap by the shorter sides of the cap, it comes off a lot easier. If you are holding on the broad side of the cap, you inadvertently press down pushing the raised edges even more firmly into the indentation which allows the cap to clip on making it more difficult to remove the cap.
I am testing this drive's read and write speeds and they are generally OK. It has an average read speed of 23 MB/s and a write speed of 13 MB/s under ideal conditions.
The body of this drive is a little large (it is a 32 GB after all) and it might not play nice when trying to plug it in immediately adjacent to other USB cables. I am downloading Ubuntu USB install/distro and will leave a followup review at some point to let you guys know how well that worked out using this drive.
Info from drive test using CrystalDiskMark:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
CrystalDiskMark 3.0 x64 (C) 2007-2010 hiyohiyo
Crystal Dew World : [...]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
* MB/s = 1,000,000 byte/s [SATA/300 = 300,000,000 byte/s]
Sequential Read : 23.508 MB/s
Sequential Write : 13.305 MB/s
Random Read 512KB : 22.599 MB/s
Random Write 512KB : 1.315 MB/s
Random Read 4KB (QD=1) : 5.575 MB/s [ 1361.0 IOPS]
Random Write 4KB (QD=1) : 0.013 MB/s [ 3.1 IOPS]
Random Read 4KB (QD=32) : 5.879 MB/s [ 1435.3 IOPS]
Random Write 4KB (QD=32) : 0.011 MB/s [ 2.8 IOPS]
Test : 1000 MB [G: 0.0% (0.0/29.9 GB)] (x2)
Date : 2010/08/04 20:09:11
OS : Windows Vista Ultimate Edition SP2 [6.0 Build 6002] (x64)
However, two helpful hints in removing the cap. First, I took a nail file and gently filed down the raised edges that allow the cap to clip onto the body of the USB drive. be careful not to remove too much else you'll never get the cap to stay on. I think it is better for it to be too tight than too loose.
Also, the clips are on the longer portion of the cap, so if you hold the cap by the shorter sides of the cap, it comes off a lot easier. If you are holding on the broad side of the cap, you inadvertently press down pushing the raised edges even more firmly into the indentation which allows the cap to clip on making it more difficult to remove the cap.
I am testing this drive's read and write speeds and they are generally OK. It has an average read speed of 23 MB/s and a write speed of 13 MB/s under ideal conditions.
The body of this drive is a little large (it is a 32 GB after all) and it might not play nice when trying to plug it in immediately adjacent to other USB cables. I am downloading Ubuntu USB install/distro and will leave a followup review at some point to let you guys know how well that worked out using this drive.
Info from drive test using CrystalDiskMark:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
CrystalDiskMark 3.0 x64 (C) 2007-2010 hiyohiyo
Crystal Dew World : [...]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
* MB/s = 1,000,000 byte/s [SATA/300 = 300,000,000 byte/s]
Sequential Read : 23.508 MB/s
Sequential Write : 13.305 MB/s
Random Read 512KB : 22.599 MB/s
Random Write 512KB : 1.315 MB/s
Random Read 4KB (QD=1) : 5.575 MB/s [ 1361.0 IOPS]
Random Write 4KB (QD=1) : 0.013 MB/s [ 3.1 IOPS]
Random Read 4KB (QD=32) : 5.879 MB/s [ 1435.3 IOPS]
Random Write 4KB (QD=32) : 0.011 MB/s [ 2.8 IOPS]
Test : 1000 MB [G: 0.0% (0.0/29.9 GB)] (x2)
Date : 2010/08/04 20:09:11
OS : Windows Vista Ultimate Edition SP2 [6.0 Build 6002] (x64)
Good Design / Poor Design . How can something so small be so good yet so frustrating at the same time.
I buy a lot of these types of drives, and hate when the designers get too clever for their own good. (mainly in other models)
I have other drives that incorporate that "slider bar" concept, that cause the USB connection piece to peek in an out. That sucks, and is poor design. Don't do that.
It always invariable creates either a questionable connection, and is too "floppy" in tight spots. In tight spots behind the computer, it's the equivilant of how George Burns used to describe making love in his 90's. "Like shooting pool with a rope", Stay away from slider bar drives.
This Kingston drive has solid and steady connection piece, and the 32GB is really great and at the high end of the current technology.
However, they put a big plastic cap over, it, which was so hard to get off, I ended up pulling the bottom plastic piece off instead. Poor design. No need to make it so tight. Really, there's no need for a cap at all, unless you're throwing this thing in your purse or pocket, and it happens to have cookie crumbs or something that will get in there.
What's up with that?
The drive itself is awesome, and easy to insert and remove, with assurance that a good connection is made.
I buy a lot of these types of drives, and hate when the designers get too clever for their own good. (mainly in other models)
I have other drives that incorporate that "slider bar" concept, that cause the USB connection piece to peek in an out. That sucks, and is poor design. Don't do that.
It always invariable creates either a questionable connection, and is too "floppy" in tight spots. In tight spots behind the computer, it's the equivilant of how George Burns used to describe making love in his 90's. "Like shooting pool with a rope", Stay away from slider bar drives.
This Kingston drive has solid and steady connection piece, and the 32GB is really great and at the high end of the current technology.
However, they put a big plastic cap over, it, which was so hard to get off, I ended up pulling the bottom plastic piece off instead. Poor design. No need to make it so tight. Really, there's no need for a cap at all, unless you're throwing this thing in your purse or pocket, and it happens to have cookie crumbs or something that will get in there.
What's up with that?
The drive itself is awesome, and easy to insert and remove, with assurance that a good connection is made.
Cons Review
High capacity low quality . I've bought Kingston USB drives exclusively for years, but this is probably my last one. I actually got 3 of them on sale (non-Amazon site) and it's a good thing they were cheap and I got more than one, for the first one suffered physical failure within a week. As another user posted, the cap is hard to remove and the clear plastic case came off far too easily. The drive fails to mount half the time I insert it; must pull it out and put it back in and only then will the PC/Mac (I use it on both) will see it. And the USB plug started "drooping" at weird angles, showing that it is not fastened firmly enough inside the drive; it's only a matter of time before it breaks off entirely and the drive is kaput.
So I moved on to the second drive. When first inserted, it claimed to Disk Utility that it was 1.9 TB in size. As really cool as that would have been, it prevented the drive from being formatted. Unplugging and replugging had no effect--it steadfastly claimed to be 1.9 TB in size. I was eventually able to format it on another computer but this is just weird. I've never had issues with USB drives before and now suddenly 2 out of 3 of the same model give me bizarre behavior? It's time to move on to a different brand. I read recently that Kingston has started subcontracting its manufacture out to other, less-reliable firms. I strongly suspect that's what happened here; to get a cheap 32Gb drive to market they went with the low bidder and slapped the "Kingston" name on it. Sad.
So I moved on to the second drive. When first inserted, it claimed to Disk Utility that it was 1.9 TB in size. As really cool as that would have been, it prevented the drive from being formatted. Unplugging and replugging had no effect--it steadfastly claimed to be 1.9 TB in size. I was eventually able to format it on another computer but this is just weird. I've never had issues with USB drives before and now suddenly 2 out of 3 of the same model give me bizarre behavior? It's time to move on to a different brand. I read recently that Kingston has started subcontracting its manufacture out to other, less-reliable firms. I strongly suspect that's what happened here; to get a cheap 32Gb drive to market they went with the low bidder and slapped the "Kingston" name on it. Sad.
Was a Great product - until it died. . I received the 4 GB version free from Kingston as a replacement to a different model that gone bad but was still under warranty. When I got it, I reformated it to exFat, which increases its read/write speed. It has worked beautifully.
The 4 GB is still working fine. But the 64 GB that I bought just died taking more than 20 GB of data with it. Fortunately is was backed up -- but still. Kingston used to offer great products, but lately they don't seem up par. This is the third USB drive I have had to send back to Kingston customer service....
The 4 GB is still working fine. But the 64 GB that I bought just died taking more than 20 GB of data with it. Fortunately is was backed up -- but still. Kingston used to offer great products, but lately they don't seem up par. This is the third USB drive I have had to send back to Kingston customer service....
Simply doesn't work with XP or Windows 7 . Initially my 2 computers running windows 7 would see the drive about half the time but this eventually went to not at all or occasionally would see the drive and say it needed to format the drive first, then would say it can't communicate with the drive to format it. I tried everything on the support list at [...] to fix it. I tried multiple computers, XP, Windows 7 to no avail. I'm now trying to get [...], Kingston or Amazon to refund my money or give me a different drive. All my computers work fine with other flash drives and external hard drives. Of course, except my other Kingston 4GB drive, it works maybe 10% of the time and you have to repeatedly restart the computer to get the drive to work. I wont buy Kingston stuff (not the word I wanted to use) anymore.
Feature Kingston DataTraveler 102 - 8 GB USB 2.0 Flash Drive DT102/8GB
- High Speed USB Drive
- Is a pocket size
- Supports windows & Mac
- Has 5 yr Warranty
- Provides 24/7 Technical Support
Product Details
EAN : 5051964697527UPC : 740617167931
MPN : 0740617164435
Brand : Kingston
Weight : 1 pounds
Height : 1 inches
Length : 4 inches
Width : 2 inches
Binding : Personal Computers
Format : CD-ROM
Hardware Platform : Mac
ItemPartNumber : DT1028GB
Manufacturer : Kingston Technology
Model : DT102/8GB
Operating System : Macintosh
Platform : Macintosh
Publisher : Kingston Technology
Size : 8 GB
SKU : RT-SU00674
Studio : Kingston Technology
Where To Buy
You can buy Kingston DataTraveler 102 - 8 GB USB 2.0 Flash Drive DT102/8GB on Amazon . Click here to Read More