World’s Largest Commercially Available Flash Drive?
One flash drive. Two hundred and fifty six gigabytes. Limitless pornography.
Gentlemen, meet the DT-310, a Kingston flash drive that holds 256 gigabytes of data in its tiny frame. It costs eleven hundred dollars, reads up to 25 megabytes per second and writes at 12 MB/s. It’s the most unneccessary thing I’ve ever seen, and as such, I want it very badly.
Hilariously, it’s the second generation of this model – the first, released in late 2009, had slower read/write speeds, which is understandable for a drive carrying around a whaleload of data.
Could Kingston’s monster of a flash drive be the world’s largest commercially available flash drive? My searches on Newegg and Amazon have failed to find a bigger one, so I’m willing to concede that the DT-310’s the biggest. Hey Technomaly readers – if you can find a bigger mass market, commercially produced and available flash drive, email me at asterios.kokkinos@gmail.com and I’ll send you something free in the mail! It won’t be expensive, but it will beĀ free!
Hey, who wants some Windows 95 installation discs?
Source & Photo Source: New York Times



March 1st, 2010 at 9:24 pm
This is crazy. What will we come up with next. If people sent this to us, I’m not sure we can cover the amount of data in here (Sarcastically!!). We do usb flash data recovery, but this is ridiculous.