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| Western Digital 160GB 2.5-inch Passport USB Portable Hard Drive | 
enlarge | Brand: Western Digital Category: CE
List Price: $191.61 Buy New: $73.35 You Save: $118.26 (62%)
New (6) Used (1) from $60.75
Avg. Customer Rating: 216 reviews Sales Rank: 1462
Format: Cd Platforms: Macintosh, Windows Media: Electronics Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Batteries Included: No Hard Drive Size: 160 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.1 x 3.1 x 0.6 Warranty: 3 years warranty
MPN: WDXMS1600TN Model: WDXMS1600TN UPC: 718037119052 EAN: 0718037119052 ASIN: B000J1HPXK
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| | Form Factor - 2.5"-External | | | Dimensions WxDxH - 79.78 x 129.78 x 15 mm | | | Weight - 0.1048 kg |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description This sleek compact drive connects to your PC's USB port for quick and easy data transfers. The drive draws power from the USB port; you won't even need the power adapter. WD Sync synchronization and encryption software lets you save your critical data, and take it with you. Plug your drive into any PC, edit files, read e-mail and view photos. Then sync all of your changes back to your home or office computer. Dimensions (LengthxWidthxHeight) - 5.110 x 3.14 x 0.590 Inches / Weight - 0.23 Pounds
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| Customer Reviews: Read 211 more reviews...
I made it function with help from a Belkin PCMCIA card August 17, 2008 . I purchased two of these at once; one as a gift. Neither worked because they were made for USB ports that supply more power than my Gateway or my friend's Dell put forth. Western Digital, I discovered later, states that they don't work in "some" laptops.
WD sells some affordable accessories that are supposed to boost power in the unit, (for those laptops that need more USB power to make these work.) One of the suggested items they sell is a Y-connector so you can utilize the power from two USB ports at once. This would seem to be a nuisance unplugging my USB mouse, and I had problems with WD delivering the items anyway (after ordering them twice.) Also, WD informed me by email I couldn't obtain the power boosters anywhere else except from them.
Okay... that aside for now. Let's consider the purpose of these drives and whether that purpose matches what you want it to do.
I wanted a simple mass storage device, like a flash stick only bigger. That's not exactly what these were designed for. They are cleverly designed to mimick your own hard drive so when you travel you just unplug the drive and take it to any computer and that remote computer becomes, magically, your home computer. Your email, your documents, everything appears on the remote computer as if you had brought your home computer with you... even your wallpaper is duplicated.
This seems very clever indeed but not what I wanted. So I deleted the software I found on it as my first order of business-- that stopped it from automatically filling itself with the contents of my computer.
Then I used my my computer to reformat the whole drive in NTFS. Right click My Computer, Manage, Disk Management (and... um... do be sure to format the right drive-- not your C: drive.)
Now it was clean and ready to be used as a big removable storage device-- which was what I wanted.
I had to invest $54 to solve the power problem but did so without dealing with WD. I purchased a Belkin PCMCIA 2.0 2-port USB card, which created two additional USB slots on my computer that both worked even better than the original ones. This card pluged easily into my previously unused PCMCIA slot. It came with a power cord so there is no power deficit issue.
If you use this method, do please read the instructions and don't just plug in the card. It comes with a driver to install first from a disc.
The WD Passport works fine in there now and has for three days, and I can put my flash drive in the open USB slot next to it. I'm getting fast data transfers. The WD Passport does what I wanted it to do now.
Other reviews I've read elsewhere indicate that after a short time the drive ceased to work for a few people, so read more reviews. The Belkin card was a good purchase nevertheless, I can imagine many uses for a more powerful and faster USB port, and the card doubled the number of USB ports I have. If the WD Passport fails... well... it will have worked for awhile and that's better than I had expected after I first got it home.
Oh... and I purchased a Belkin card for my friend as well. As of today I don't see this particular Belkin item on Amazon or I'd paste a link to it. I bought mine at Staples.
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WD 160GB portable hard drive July 29, 2008 Product was great slim size, portable and works well. It was delivered in a timely manner.
Warning "You will lose all your Data" Corrupted everything July 9, 2008 I transfered all my data and it lasted about two months before I noticed a performance issue (slow response). Then files started to become corrupted. Attempted to transfer to a know good drive, but already lost a large portion of my data.
WRONG VERSION: DO NOT BUY July 2, 2008 This product is an outdated model. It is MORE expensive than newer versions with double the capacity--available on Amazon. Why in God's name is this still for sale at this price? Why in God's name would anyone pay it?
Incidentally I own one and it's a good product.
Died after 6 months June 16, 2008 If you use any kind of external harddrive BACK UP DAILY! I cannot stress this enough. This is my third portable hard drive from 3 different companies. WD Passport 160 GB died after 6 months.
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