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A keydrive is essentially NAND-type flash memory integrated with a USB interface used as a small, lightweight, removable data storage device. This hot-swappable, non-volatile, solid-state device is universally compatible with post Windows 98 platforms, Macintosh platforms, and most Unix-like platforms. Image information A typical USB flash drive, shown with a US quarter coin for scale. ...
Image information A typical USB flash drive, shown with a US quarter coin for scale. ...
The quarter is 1/4th of a United States dollar or 25 cents. ...
Flash memory is a form of EEPROM that allows multiple memory locations to be erased or written in one programming operation. ...
Type A USB connector USB 2. ...
Removable media are transportable drives or disks that can be moved easily from one computer to another. ...
In computing, a data storage device—as the name implies—is a device for storing data. ...
Hot swapping is the ability to add or remove parts of a computer system without turning off the system. ...
Non-volatile memory is a form of computer storage which can retain its state even when not powered. ...
In physics, the solid state is one of the three phases of matter (solid, liquid, and gas). ...
Microsoft Windows is a range of closed source proprietary commercial operating environments for personal computers and servers. ...
Macintosh, also known as Mac, is a family of personal computers manufactured by Apple Computer, Inc. ...
A Unix-like operating system is one that behaves in a manner similar to the UNIX system, while not necessarily conforming to or being certified to any version of the Single UNIX Specification. ...
Keydrives are also known as "keydrives", “pen drives”, “thumb drives”, “flash drives”, “USB keys”, “USB memory keys”, “USB sticks”, "jump drives", and many more names. They are also sometimes miscalled memory sticks (a Sony trademark describing a different type of portable memory). 128 MB Memory Stick with MagicGate support Memory Stick is a removable memory card format, launched by Sony in October 1998. ...
Sony Corporation (Japanese katakana: ソニー) (NYSE: SNE) is a consumer electronics corporation based in Tokyo, Japan. ...
A trademark (Commonwealth English: trade mark)[1] is a distinctive sign of some kind which is used by a business to identify itself and its products or services to consumers, and to set the business and its products or services apart from those of other businesses. ...
A keydrive consists of a small printed circuit board encased with a robust plastic casing, making the drive sturdy enough to be carried around in a pocket, as a keyfob, or on a lanyard. Only the USB connector protrudes from this plastic protection, and is often covered by a removable plastic cap. Most keydrives feature the larger type-A USB connection, although some feature the smaller "miniUSB" connection. Close-up photo of one side of a motherboard PCB, showing conductive traces, vias and solder points for through-hole components on the opposite side. ...
A key fob is a decorative item which many people carry with their keys, on a ring or a chain, often to provide a better grip or to simply make a personal statement. ...
A lanyard is a rope or cord often worn around the neck or wrist to carry something. ...
Type A USB connector USB 2. ...
Keydrives are active only when powered by a USB computer connection, and require no other external power source or battery power source; key drives are run off the limited supply afforded by the USB connection (5V). To access the data stored in a keydrive, the keydrive must be connected to a computer, either by direct connection to the computer's USB port or via a USB hub. Four double-A batteries In science and technology, a battery is a device that stores energy and makes it available in an electrical form. ...
The keydrive was first invented in 1998 at IBM as a floppy drive replacement for the ThinkPad line of products. Although there is an IBM disclosure, they did not patent it. IBM later contracted M-Systems to develop and manufacture it non-exclusively. M-Systems holds the patent to this device as well as a few other related patents. International Business Machines Corporation (IBM, or colloquially, Big Blue) (NYSE: IBM) (incorporated June 15, 1911, in operation since 1888) is headquartered in Armonk, New York, USA. The company manufactures and sells computer hardware, software, and services. ...
Components
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The internal components of a typical keydrive Download high resolution version (1000x959, 490 KB) The internal components of a typical keydrive This photograph shows both sides of the printed circuit board inside a typical keydrive (circa 2004), in this case an inexpensive 64 Mbyte USB2. ...
| | 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 | This photograph shows both sides of the printed circuit board inside a typical keydrive (circa 2004). The keydrive in this photograph is a 64 Mbyte USB2.0 device with its plastic case removed. Close-up photo of one side of a motherboard PCB, showing conductive traces, vias and solder points for through-hole components on the opposite side. ...
2004 is a leap year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
One end of the device is fitted a single male type-A USB connector. Inside the plastic casing is a small, highly cost-engineered, printed circuit board. Mounted on this board are some simple power circuity 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 provides the flash memory storage. Surface-mount components on a keydrives circuit board Surface mount technology (SMT) is a method for constructing electronic circuits in which the components are mounted directly onto the surface of printed circuit boards (PCBs). ...
An integrated circuit (IC) is a thin chip consisting of at least two interconnected semiconductor devices, mainly transistors, as well as passive components like resistors. ...
Flash memory is a form of EEPROM that allows multiple memory locations to be erased or written in one programming operation. ...
Essential components The parts of a typical keydrive are as follows: - male type-A USB connector - provides an interface to the host computer. (item 1 in the diagram)
- USB mass storage controller - implements the USB host controller and provides a seamless linear interface to block-oriented serial flash devices while hiding the complexities of block-orientation, block erasure, and wear balancing. The controller contains a small RISC microprocessor and a small amount of ROM and RAM. (item 2 in the diagram)
- A NAND flash memory chip - stores data. NAND flash is typically also used in digital cameras. (item 4 in the diagram)
- crystal oscillator - produces the device's main 12 MHz clock signal and controls the device's data output through phase-locked loop (item 5 in the diagram)
Reduced Instruction Set Computing, is a microprocessor CPU design philosophy that favors a smaller and simpler set of instructions that all take about the same amount of time to execute. ...
Rom is also the name of a toy and comic book character Rom (Spaceknight). ...
Different types of RAM. From top to bottom: DIP, SIPP, SIMM 30 pin, SIMM 72 pin, DIMM, RIMM RAM redirects here. ...
A crystal oscillator is an electronic device that uses the mechanical resonance of a physical crystal of piezoelectric material to create an electrical signal with a very precise frequency. ...
In synchronous digital electronics, such as most computers, a clock signal is a signal used to coordinate the actions of two or more circuits. ...
Many electronic systems use internal clocks which are required to be phase-aligned to and/or frequency multiples of some external reference clock. ...
Additional components The typical device may also include: - Jumpers and test pins - for testing during the keydrive's manufacturing. (item 3 in the diagram)
- LEDs - indicates data transfers or data reads and writes. (item 6 in the diagram)
- Write-protect switch - indicates whether the device should be in "write-protection" mode. (item 7 in the diagram)
- unpopulated space - provides space to include a second memory chip. Having this second space allows the manufacturer to choose. (generally on a cost basis) whether to use one or two memory chips. (item 8 in the diagram)
- USB connector cover or cap - reduces the risk of damage due to static electricity, improves overall device appearance. Some keydrives do not feature a cap but instead feature retractable USB connectors.
- Transport aid - In some cases, the cap contained the hole suitable for connection to a key chain or to otherwise aid transport and storage of the USB flash device. However, this increases the risk of the device being lost during transport. For these reason, most devices now connect the cap to the main device body.
Various light-emitting diodes (5 mm reds, 3 mm greens and yellows) A light-emitting diode (LED) is a semiconductor device that emits incoherent monochromatic light when electrically biased in the forward direction. ...
A key fob is a decorative item which many people carry with their keys, on a ring or a chain, often to provide a better grip or to simply make a personal statement. ...
Strengths and weaknesses Keydrives are impervious to the scratches and dust that plagued previous forms of portable storage like compact discs and floppy disks, and their durable solid-state design means they often survive casual insults (impacts, being dropped or crushed, run through a washing machine, or even dropped in coffee). This makes them ideal for transporting personal data or work files from one location to another (such as from home to school or office) or for carrying around personal data that the user typically wants to access in a variety of places. The near-ubiquity of USB support on modern (post-1996) computers means that such a drive will work in most places and that problems with device and driver incompatibilities are unlikely. Image of a recordable compact disc (pencil included for scale) A compact disc (or CD) is an optical disc used to store digital data, originally developed for storing digital audio. ...
A floppy disk is a data storage device that is composed of a circular piece of thin, flexible (i. ...
1996 is a leap year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar, and was designated the International Year for the Eradication of Poverty. ...
Keydrives are also a relatively dense form of storage - even the cheapest will store more than dozens of floppy disks, and a moderately priced one will carry as much as a CD. Historically, keydrive capacity has ranged from a few megabytes in size up to a few gigabytes, although some computers have trouble reading and writing to devices that have more than 2 GB of storage. In 2003 most keydrives ran at the USB 1.0/1.1 speeds of 1.5 Mbit/s or 12 Mbit/s. 2004 saw the release of newer USB keys featuring USB 2.0 interfaces. Although USB 2.0 tops out at 480 Mbit/s, these keydrives are limited by the bandwidth of the underlying flash memory device, with maximum read speeds of around 100 Mbit/s and write speeds a little slower. In ideal conditions, the flash memory in the drives can retain data for 10 years. A megabyte (derived from the SI prefix mega-) is a unit of information or computer storage equal to one million bytes. ...
A gigabyte (symbol GB) is a unit of measurement in computers of one thousand million bytes (the same as one billion bytes in the short scale usage). ...
2003 is a common year starting on Wednesday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
2004 is a leap year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Keydrives implement the USB mass storage device class, meaning that most modern operating systems can read and write to keydrives without any additional device drivers. Instead of exposing the complex technical detail of the underlying flash memory devices, the keydrives export a simple block-structured logical unit to the host operating system. This way the OS can use whatever type of filesystem or block addressing scheme it wants. Some computers have the ability to boot up from keydrives, but that capability must be supported in the computer's BIOS, and (like other mass storage devices) the keydrive must be set up to do so and loaded with a bootable disk image (rather than a conventional filesystem image). Download high resolution version (1600x1200, 300 KB)Image of a Creative MuVo digital audio player / keydrive A copy of nl:Afbeelding:Usb mp3. ...
Download high resolution version (1600x1200, 300 KB)Image of a Creative MuVo digital audio player / keydrive A copy of nl:Afbeelding:Usb mp3. ...
A digital audio player (DAP) is a device that stores, organizes and plays digital music files. ...
A keydrive, a typical USB mass storage device The USB mass storage device class is a set of computing communications protocols defined by the USB Implementers Forum that run on the Universal Serial Bus. ...
In computing, an operating system (OS) is the system software responsible for the direct control and management of hardware and basic system operations. ...
A device driver, often called a driver for short, is a computer program that enables another program (typically, an operating system) to interact with a hardware device. ...
See Filing system for this term as it is used in libraries and offices In computing, a file system is a method for storing and organizing computer files and the data they contain to make it easy to find and access them. ...
The tower of a personal computer (specifically a Power Mac G5). ...
In computing, booting is a bootstrapping process that starts operating systems when the user turns on a computer system. ...
In computing, the Basic Input-Output System or BIOS is primitive software code embedded within a computer hardware system whose main functions are: to provide a visual display of the system to a monitor on startup of the system, have basic key access to a keyboard and provide low-level...
Like all flash memory devices, keydrives can sustain only a limited number of write/erase cycles before failure. In normal use, mid-range keydrives currently on the market will support several million cycles, although write operations will gradually slow as the device ages. This should be a consideration when using a keydrive as a hard drive to run application software or an operating system. To address this (and the space limitations common on keydrives) some developers have produced versions of operating systems (such as Linux) or commonplace applications (such as the Mozilla Firefox) designed to run from keydrives. These are typically optimized for size and set up so as to place temporary or intermediate files in memory rather than nonvolatile storage (to avoid excessive writing to the flash memory in the keydrive). Mozilla Firefox (originally known as Phoenix and briefly as Mozilla Firebird) is a free, cross-platform, graphical web browser developed by the Mozilla Foundation and hundreds of volunteers [1]. Before its 1. ...
Common uses Network administration Keydrives are particularly popular among system and network administrators, who load them with configuration information and with software used for system maintenance, troubleshooting, and recovery. The write protect feature on the keydrive is particularly useful for such uses, as it allows the system administrator to plug a keydrive containing anti-virus, spyware-removal, or trouble diagnosis software onto a suspect machine without risking the transmission of a virus or worm. Write protection, (also known as record protection) is a mechanism that prevents erasure of valuable data by the accidental recording or storing of new data. ...
In computer security technology, a virus is a self-replicating program that spreads by inserting copies of itself into other executable code or documents (for a complete definition: see below). ...
A computer worm is a self-replicating computer program, similar to a ...
Keydrives for applications Keydrives are also used to carry applications, which run on the host computer without requiring installation. The Mozilla Firefox browser has a configuration for keydrives. U3, backed by flash drive vendors, offers an API to keydrive-specific functions. airWRX (http://networkimprov.net/airwrx/) is an application framework that runs from a keydrive, and turns its PC host and other nearby PCs into a multi-screen, web-like work environment. Mozilla Firefox (originally known as Phoenix and briefly as Mozilla Firebird) is a free, cross-platform, graphical web browser developed by the Mozilla Foundation and hundreds of volunteers [1]. Before its 1. ...
API redirects here. ...
Keydrives as audio players Many companies make solid-state digital audio players (MP3 players) in a small Form factor, essentially producing keydrives with sound output and a rudimentary user interface. Others produce small solid-state mp3 players which contain a removable keydrive. In physics, the solid state is one of the three phases of matter (solid, liquid, and gas). ...
A digital audio player (DAP) is a device that stores, organizes and plays digital music files. ...
Form factor refers to the linear dimensions and configuration of a device as distinguished from other measures of size (for example Gigabytes; a measure of storage size): in computing, form factor is used to describe the size and format of PC motherboards (see AT, ATX, BTX), but also of hard...
Security Some keydrives feature encryption of the data stored on them, generally using an encrypted filesystem rather than a conventional one. This prevents an unauthorized person (who has found or stolen the drive) from accessing confidential data stored on it. The disadvantage of this is that the drive is accessible only in the minority of computers which have the same encryption software (for which no portable standard is widely deployed) unless the encryption software is stored unencrypted on the drive, and the user must move the (large, and frequently impossible-to-remember) cryptographic key around by some other means. A key is a piece of information that controls the operation of a cryptography algorithm. ...
There are applications (TrueCrypt (http://truecrypt.sourceforge.net/), Private Disk (http://www.private-disk.net/), etc.) which allow running without installation. The executable files can be stored on the USB drive, together with the encrypted file-image. This means that the encrypted partition can be accessed on any computer running Microsoft Windows. Microsoft Windows is a range of closed source proprietary commercial operating environments for personal computers and servers. ...
Some manufacturers deploy physical authentication tokens in the form of a keydrive. These are used to control access to a sensitive system, whether by containing encryption keys or (more commonly) by communicating with security software on the target machine. The system is designed so the target machine will not operate except when the keydrive device is plugged into it. Some of these "PC lock" devices also function as normal keydrives when plugged into other machines. Keydrives also pose large organisations a significant security problem. 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 keydrive to a free USB port and uploading hacking software such as rootkits or packet sniffers. To prevent this some organisations (particularly government departments and larger corporations) forbid the use of keydrives, and some computers are configured to disable the mounting of USB mass storage devices by ordinary users (a feature found only belatedly on Windows XP, being introduced only in its second service pack). In a lower-tech security solution, some organizations disconnect USB ports inside the computer or fill the USB sockets with epoxy. A root kit is a set of tools used after cracking a computer system that hides logins, processes, and logs as well as usually sniff terminals, connections, and the keyboard. ...
Packet sniffers (also known as Network Analyzers or Ethernet Sniffers) are software programs that can see the traffic passing over a network or part of a network. ...
Windows XP (codename Whistler, also known as Windows NT 5. ...
Naming confusion The abundance of different names for these devices has often been a source of confusion. With no common name agreed upon, it has been more difficult for manufacturers to market the product, and for consumers to find information, compare prices (particularly on price-comparison websites), or discuss it with others. Some feel that this may have slowed the widespread adoption of this technology. Manufacturing is the transformation of raw materials into finished goods for sale, or intermediate processes involving the production or finishing of semi-manufactures. ...
Traditionally, Marketing has been a term applied to the craft of linking the producers (or potential producers) of a product or service with customers, both existing and potential. ...
In economics, consumers are individuals or households that consume goods and services generated within the economy. ...
Among the names are: - flash drives
- jump drives - Lexar sells their keydrives under this trademarked name
- keychain drives
- keydrives
- Kikinou (primarily in French)
- micro hard drives
- pen drives
- Piripicho (primarily in Spanish)
- pocket drives
- thumb drives
- USB flash drives
- USB flash memory drives
- USB keys
- USB memory keys
- USB memory stick - The term is also often used informally despite the fact memory stick is a Sony trademark.
- USB sticks
128 MB Memory Stick with MagicGate support Memory Stick is a removable memory card format, launched by Sony in October 1998. ...
Sony Corporation (Japanese katakana: ソニー) (NYSE: SNE) is a consumer electronics corporation based in Tokyo, Japan. ...
A trademark (Commonwealth English: trade mark)[1] is a distinctive sign of some kind which is used by a business to identify itself and its products or services to consumers, and to set the business and its products or services apart from those of other businesses. ...
Comparison to other forms of portable memory Flash storage devices are best compared to other common, portable, swappable data storage devices: floppy disks, zip disks, and CDs. Floppy and zip are each still available on the market as storage media despite their declining popularity. While it would be ideal to transport files between computers wirelessly, not all computers are equipped with wireless cards and networks are not readily available. Floppy disks have essentially become obsolete due to their low capacity (1.44 MB) and their relatively low speed. Floppies were the first publicly-popular method of file transportation. Currently, very few systems may be purchased with a built-in floppy drive whereas very few systems may be purchased without a USB interface. Overall, the faster Flash memeory with its nearly universally available USB interface is more convenient than the ancient floppies. Floppy disks are still in use primarily because of their ease mounting into DOS and Linux systems. Zip disks in many ways have gone the way of the floppy. Zip disks have capacities up to 250MB, but, like the floppy, zip drives are found built into systems rarely. Similarly, Zip is considered slower and more cumbersome than flash storage devices. CD-R and CD-RW are another alternative for swappable storage media. Inverse to zip and floppy, CD burners are increasingly common in computer systems. While CDs are not suseptible to read/write wear (keydrives wear out after 10,000 read/write cycles), optical storage devices are slow. The major inconvenince that limits CDs over flash is the CD's inability to fit in a pocket or hang from a keychain. Flash storage devices, compared to other storage media, are fast, large, durable, and compact. They share characteristics with magnetic tape, and, unlike zip and floppies, flash memory lacks moving parts, making them ideal as a simple solution, requiring only a port to interact with a system. The popularity of flash storage devices may be attributed to their compact size, multiple operating system compatibility, and their use of the standard USB interface.
Trivia In 2004, the German Punk Band WIZO was the first artist to release music in MP3 format on a USB drive entitled the "WIZO Stick-EP." 2004 is a leap year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Punk rock is an anti-establishment music movement beginning around 1976 (although precursors can be found several years earlier), exemplified and popularised by The Ramones, the Sex Pistols, The Clash and The Damned. ...
WIZO (pronounced Vee-Zoh) is a Punk Rock band from Sindelfingen, Germany. ...
Future developments Semiconductors corporations have striven to radically reduce the cost of the components in a keydrive, doing so by integrating various keydrive functions in a single chip, and thus reducing the part-count and overall package cost. As of 2004 some manufacturers are planning to include more ICs the storage and logic/communications functions are packaged in a single, ultra-low-cost device. 2004 is a leap year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
See also The USB Flash Drive Alliance, founded in December 2003 by Samsung, Lexar Media, Kingston Technology and others, is promoting the use of USB flash drives (also called keydrives). ...
The pocket hard drive is a higher capacity variant of the Flash drive. ...
SneakerNet is the term used (generally with ironic intent) for transfer of electronic information (see: computer file) by physically carrying removable media (magnetic tape, floppy disks, compact discs) from one personal computer to another. ...
External links Keydrive applications Noncommercial GNU/Linux distributions for USB |