I've never had a problem on Windows 2k or Xp. Anything earlier than that will more than likely require you to download and install the driver...I'm sure ME is also plug and play.
DiscoDave wrote:And whenever you're finished with the flash drive, always use the safly eject hardware tool that will appear as soon as you connect it.
DiscoDave wrote:And whenever you're finished with the flash drive, always use the safly eject hardware tool that will appear as soon as you connect it.
ME, 2K, XP etc will all allow you to forcefully remove it, its just wise to safly eject it
If you keep pulling it out, it will damage it. I would know, at my old sixth form we couldn't access the eject hardware thing so we have to just pull them out. 4 months later me and 2 friends had dead usb flash sticks, all diffrent makes.
Exactly. I've never seen an issue with data loss by just pulling the drive. Hell, I use a Lexar jumpdrive and an iPod shuffle every day and never click that eject icon (and months later there still is no problem)
DiscoDave wrote:
If you keep pulling it out, it will damage it.
No, it won't.
Well it did to my pen drive aswell as my friends. Maybe it was because they were brand new then and unmatured. But look at it this way, if they wouldn't need it, why is it on there? and why does windows tell you to eject it before you finish with it
DiscoDave wrote:
Well it did to my pen drive aswell as my friends. Maybe it was because they were brand new then and unmatured. But look at it this way, if they wouldn't need it, why is it on there? and why does windows tell you to eject it before you finish with it
The feature was created for devices which had write caching enabled by default (usually external hard drives, SCSI components, etc). The risk of corruption for a USB device is miniscule and really not worth being concerned over.