• Welcome to Tux Reports: Where Penguins Fly. We hope you find the topics varied, interesting, and worthy of your time. Please become a member and join in the discussions.

USB Flash Drives

P

Pnoahjones

Flightless Bird
My friend saved a word document and came back to a new computer and his flash
drive said that the data was lost or corrupt. My question is he said that he
couldnt find the safely remove hardware button at our college computers so he
just pulled it out after saving would that make his USB go bad? What makes a
USB Flash drive go bad? and also as someone in the IT tech Field what do i
tell people to prevent this there USB going bad?
 
D

DL

Flightless Bird
Flash drive should be only used for copying data from a hard drive to
another location.
Flash Drives can differ in quality

"Pnoahjones" <Pnoahjones@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:54F4166E-99CB-4A7F-B3F4-10C6A7CA6793@microsoft.com...
> My friend saved a word document and came back to a new computer and his
> flash
> drive said that the data was lost or corrupt. My question is he said that
> he
> couldnt find the safely remove hardware button at our college computers so
> he
> just pulled it out after saving would that make his USB go bad? What makes
> a
> USB Flash drive go bad? and also as someone in the IT tech Field what do i
> tell people to prevent this there USB going bad?
 
B

Bob I

Flightless Bird
Yes, if he pulled it out while it was being written to. Or the drive
could have just failed. You can't "prevent" a drive from failing, but
you can avoid corrupting it by not removing it while it is being written to.

Pnoahjones wrote:

> My friend saved a word document and came back to a new computer and his flash
> drive said that the data was lost or corrupt. My question is he said that he
> couldnt find the safely remove hardware button at our college computers so he
> just pulled it out after saving would that make his USB go bad? What makes a
> USB Flash drive go bad? and also as someone in the IT tech Field what do i
> tell people to prevent this there USB going bad?
 
J

JoAnn Paules [MVP]

Flightless Bird
Did he save it directly to the flash drive (poor practice) or did he save it
to the hard drive then copy it over to the flash drive (preferred method)?

--
JoAnn Paules
MVP Microsoft [Publisher]
Tech Editor for "Microsoft Publisher 2007 For Dummies"



"Pnoahjones" <Pnoahjones@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:54F4166E-99CB-4A7F-B3F4-10C6A7CA6793@microsoft.com...
> My friend saved a word document and came back to a new computer and his
> flash
> drive said that the data was lost or corrupt. My question is he said that
> he
> couldnt find the safely remove hardware button at our college computers so
> he
> just pulled it out after saving would that make his USB go bad? What makes
> a
> USB Flash drive go bad? and also as someone in the IT tech Field what do i
> tell people to prevent this there USB going bad?
 
S

Steve Rindsberg

Flightless Bird
In article <54F4166E-99CB-4A7F-B3F4-10C6A7CA6793@microsoft.com>, Pnoahjones
wrote:
> My friend saved a word document and came back to a new computer and his flash
> drive said that the data was lost or corrupt. My question is he said that he
> couldnt find the safely remove hardware button at our college computers so he
> just pulled it out after saving would that make his USB go bad? What makes a
> USB Flash drive go bad? and also as someone in the IT tech Field what do i
> tell people to prevent this there USB going bad?


1) Always save to the local hard drive then COPY the file to removable
drives/flash drives.

2) Conversely, always copy from the removable to the local HDD then open the
files from the HDD.

3) It'd be worth looking into why he couldn't find the remove hardware button,
but at the very least, it'd be wise to wait a few seconds or a minute after
writing to the drive and before removing it.

Finally, the data on the drive may be corrupted but the drive itself probably
hasn't gone bad.
 
J

James Silverton

Flightless Bird
JoAnn wrote on Tue, 9 Feb 2010 11:07:10 -0500:

> Did he save it directly to the flash drive (poor practice) or
> did he save it to the hard drive then copy it over to the
> flash drive (preferred method)?


I'm not disputing your advice, which is doubtless correct, but why?

--

James Silverton
Potomac, Maryland

Email, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not
 
Top