 |
|
 |
|
Next: 84.25 ' nVidia official ' BETA driver now release..
|
| Author |
Message |
External

Since: Feb 24, 2005 Posts: 46
|
(Msg. 1) Posted: Thu Mar 23, 2006 4:45 pm
Post subject: what's the story with usb flash drives which suddenly need formatting? Archived from groups: comp>sys>ibm>pc>hardware>storage (more info?)
|
|
|
Anyone know what the story is with USB flash drives which suddenly say they
need formatting?
I have a few and some of them suddenly stop working, with the windows
explorer error message when you click on what looks like a perfectly
normally working drive telling you that they need formatting. I notice that
some of them have a button on the side which doesn't seem to affect the read
or write (I think it is only supposed to affect the write?)
I am a bit afraid to format them as they have data on them I am not keen to
lose. However on one, it only saw 32kb of space on a 64 meg drive (this is
one which has almost never worked, which shows an exclamation mark in
windows explorer itself and which I thought wasn't working because it is a
USB2 drive I was trying to use in a USB 1 computer) and another wouldn't
format at all.
Nothing untoward shows up in device manager or on boot up or on plugging in
the drive. They just appear in the systray as normally working additions to
the system. There isn't a whole lot to go wrong on these things is there? >> Stay informed about: what's the story with usb flash drives which suddenly need.. |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: Feb 24, 2005 Posts: 46
|
(Msg. 2) Posted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 12:40 pm
Post subject: Re: This is why I asked 'what's the story' [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
My problem is not that I don't know what formatting is. It is that drives
which used to work suddenly report that they need formatting AND that if I
try to format them, the formatting function of xp pro doesnt either do it or
recognise that they are the right size.
(And that all these drives are free giveaways sent out by pharmaceutical
companies which put their presentations on them as PR so they were always
properly formatted). >> Stay informed about: what's the story with usb flash drives which suddenly need.. |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: Mar 24, 2006 Posts: 1
|
(Msg. 3) Posted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 12:56 pm
Post subject: Re: This is why I asked 'what's the story' [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
news.rcn.com wrote:
> My problem is not that I don't know what formatting is. It is that drives
> which used to work suddenly report that they need formatting AND that if I
> try to format them, the formatting function of xp pro doesnt either do it or
> recognise that they are the right size.
>
> (And that all these drives are free giveaways sent out by pharmaceutical
> companies which put their presentations on them as PR so they were always
> properly formatted).
Are some of the USB keys gone wrong?
(and hence making your OS barked on them).
OR
Is your OS having faults to read *some* of the USB keys?
You need to distinguish between the two.
If I were you, I will try reading those USB keys on another PC. >> Stay informed about: what's the story with usb flash drives which suddenly need.. |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: Feb 01, 2006 Posts: 1853
|
(Msg. 4) Posted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 2:55 pm
Post subject: Re: what's the story with usb flash drives which suddenly need formatting? [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
DEMAINE Benoit-Pierre <nntp_pipex.RemoveThis@demaine.info> wrote
> news.rcn.com wrote
>> Anyone know what the story is with USB flash drives which suddenly say
>> they need formatting?
> Every one used for historical reasons to format drives sold in market in
> FAT ... even internal RAM of the very first digital cams ...
More because its simpler than NTFS.
> FAT can not hold more than 2GB.
> Fat32 is not better since can hold only 32GB drives
Wrong.
> (from Microsoft specification),
Wrong again.
> and in practice over 500GB when using non Microsoft formating tools.
You dont necessarily need to use non MS formatting tools.
> Since FAT used to require trivial driver for reading file system,
> every one used to encode that one in firmwares and ROMs ...
> BUT, FAT32 is patented,
Irrelevant.
> and Microsoft asks from memory about 0.3 USD
> per device sold with compatible technology.
Wrong.
> Other problem: That FAT32 that people have to pay for is also subject to
> limitations ... and still according MS-SDK shall never be used on drives
> (in fact I should say 'partitions') above 32GB ...
Wrong again.
> to force people using NTFS over FAT
Wrong again.
> (because patent for NTFS is more expensive, and NTFS technology includes
> more features,
> and already have security) issues.
Wrong again.
> So, when manifacturers sell a USB key or a hard drive with less than
> 10USD benefit, half a dolard for paying FAT patent is not negligeable.
> About NTFS security issues, they are not very famous yet since no known
> virus exploited them by july 2005 (I dont have fresh news about it), but
> several security consultants shows them, their uses, and possible
> problems and solutions.
> ***
> in short: USB flash keys dont suddenly need formating:
> they always needed it, but the factory used to do it for you, and dont
> any more because they dont want to pay patents.
Irrelevant to his question about why the drive goes missing.
His use of the word SUDDENLY is crucial.
> You can do it safely since you either own a Microsoft system (thus paid
> for the use of all tools included), or use a Microsoft concurent system
> that have MS free algorythms ...
Utterly mangled all over again. >> Stay informed about: what's the story with usb flash drives which suddenly need.. |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: Feb 24, 2005 Posts: 46
|
(Msg. 5) Posted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 4:33 pm
Post subject: Re: This is why I asked 'what's the story' [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
|
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: Nov 07, 2003 Posts: 2178
|
(Msg. 6) Posted: Fri Mar 24, 2006 6:55 pm
Post subject: Re: This is why I asked 'what's the story' [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
Previously news.rcn.com <news.rnc.com> wrote:
>> Are some of the USB keys gone wrong?
>> (and hence making your OS barked on them).
> not sure what an usb key is? is it a key in the registry an dif so, where
> can i find it?
No, this is slang for the actual device. Also "USB dongle"
"USB memory stick",...
>>
>> OR
>>
>> Is your OS having faults to read *some* of the USB keys?
> Yes, that it pretty much it, some usb drives are read on this
> computer while others are not
Have you overwritten a lot on these devices? Especially older often
only take a very small number of overwites, e.g. 10.000. As any
change on the disk writes the FAT, these will usually go first. Worst
case is probably slow writing to a disk. (Since then the data
is flushed to disk in small pices). The you get one FAT change
every kB or so. Writing 100MB in this way then gives you 100.000 FAT
changes. Logfiles are an example here.
Other write patterns can also generate a lot more changes
in some sectors than you would normally expect.
Modern USB dongles get around this problem with defect sector
management and better storage cells, but they still have a limit
somewhere around 1.000.000 overwrites or so.
As soon as a sector is defect, you can still try a reformat with
defect mapping, but I am not sure how to do that under Windows.
As for data-recovery, you can try the usual commercial outfits,
but I have my doubts that they can do much for this specific
problem.
Arno >> Stay informed about: what's the story with usb flash drives which suddenly need.. |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: Feb 24, 2005 Posts: 46
|
(Msg. 7) Posted: Mon Mar 27, 2006 9:16 am
Post subject: Re: This is why I asked 'what's the story' [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
> No, this is slang for the actual device. Also "USB dongle"
> "USB memory stick",...
I suspected that was the case
>
>>>
>>> OR
>>>
>>> Is your OS having faults to read *some* of the USB keys?
>
>> Yes, that it pretty much it, some usb drives are read on this
>> computer while others are not
>
> Have you overwritten a lot on these devices?
No, this problem occurs on devices which ahve been overwritten as much as on
devices which have had minimal overwriting. In fact the one I thought wasnt
working because it was a usb2 device has hardly ever worked in any computer.
it just lights up, shows in device manager and reads as if there is no
device there in windows explorer.
Your answer tends to indicate that these devices cant be used as permanent
maintenace and storage devices, which is how they are sold?
Especially older often
> only take a very small number of overwites, e.g. 10.000. As any
> change on the disk writes the FAT, these will usually go first. Worst
> case is probably slow writing to a disk. (Since then the data
> is flushed to disk in small pices). The you get one FAT change
> every kB or so. Writing 100MB in this way then gives you 100.000 FAT
> changes. Logfiles are an example here.
>
> Other write patterns can also generate a lot more changes
> in some sectors than you would normally expect.
>
> Modern USB dongles get around this problem with defect sector
> management and better storage cells, but they still have a limit
> somewhere around 1.000.000 overwrites or so.
>
> As soon as a sector is defect, you can still try a reformat with
> defect mapping, but I am not sure how to do that under Windows.
> As for data-recovery, you can try the usual commercial outfits,
> but I have my doubts that they can do much for this specific
> problem.
>
> Arno >> Stay informed about: what's the story with usb flash drives which suddenly need.. |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: Feb 01, 2006 Posts: 1853
|
(Msg. 8) Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 1:55 pm
Post subject: Re: what's the story with usb flash drives which suddenly need formatting? [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
DEMAINE Benoit-Pierre <nntp_pipex.DeleteThis@demaine.info> wrote
>>> Fat32 is not better since can hold only 32GB drives
>> Wrong.
>>> (from Microsoft specification),
>> Wrong again.
> I am sorry I dont have time to seek 'again' in SDK but I have read that
> on the public part of SDK on microsoft.com !
No you havent. It actually says something quite different.
>>> (because patent for NTFS is more expensive, and NTFS technology
>>> includes more features,
>>> and already have security) issues.
>> Wrong again.
> ok:
> open a spam, and save a virus from an email. Save it under an ADS of any
> file, run all anti virus of the market on your box. I can garanty you
> that you will still be able to run the virus from the ADS without any
> problem, and that all AV have left it there !
> Today, there is not a single aV that scans ADS;
Irrelevant to NTFS. Thats an issue with AVs.
And the virus cant do anything when in there anyway.
> it thus is a preveleged place to store any malicious data, including
> virus,
> troyans, hacked system libraries ... or any thing that 'should not be
> there'.
Its obviously possible to write something that checks that.
> ADS are not either counted in the space occupied by a file, and when a
> file of 1MB occupies 1GB in a drive, you have no way to know if any
> (and which) file causes that, of if the file system itself is corrupted.
Its obviously possible to check that.
> If you copy a file with ADS to FAT, ADS gets lost. To NTFS, it stays.
Whoopy do, it cant do any harm when in there.
> Also consider that the normal file browser included in Windows (up to XP)
> does not counts/list/show ADS, but the DOS command still allows to
> create/read/write/access/delete them.
So there isnt a problem with NTFS, thats a problem with the win apps.
> Any virus could at any time store any thing in any ADS, and there is
> actually on the market not a single tool known to seek for malicious data
> there.
There is no such animal as 'malicious data'
And its obviously possible to check for extra data in there anyway
if the command line can do create/read/write/access/delete them.
And it aint DOS either. >> Stay informed about: what's the story with usb flash drives which suddenly need.. |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: Feb 01, 2006 Posts: 1853
|
(Msg. 9) Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2006 2:55 pm
Post subject: Re: what's the story with usb flash drives which suddenly need formatting? [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
DEMAINE Benoit-Pierre <nntp_pipex.DeleteThis@demaine.info> wrote
> Rod Speed wrote
>> DEMAINE Benoit-Pierre <nntp_pipex.DeleteThis@demaine.info> wrote
>>> news.rcn.com wrote
>>>> Anyone know what the story is with USB flash drives which suddenly say
>>>> they need formatting?
>>> in short: USB flash keys dont suddenly need formating:
>>> they always needed it, but the factory used to do it for you, and dont
>>> any more because they dont want to pay patents.
>> Irrelevant to his question about why the drive goes missing.
>> His use of the word SUDDENLY is crucial.
> the word 'suddenly' is very ambiguous:
Irrelevant to his question about why the drive goes missing.
> - for hundred years, people use to fight using arrows; suddenly, we have
> been able to use powder.
Irrelevant to his question about why the drive goes missing.
> I am sorry but he could very well refer to his habit to buy
> preformatted USB storage in market for years, and all of a sudden,
> get them unformatted from a local vendor, 'what breaks his habits'.
The word suddenly wouldnt be used for that when
that particular drive has previously been used fine. >> Stay informed about: what's the story with usb flash drives which suddenly need.. |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
|
You can post new topics in this forum You can reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum
|
|
|
|
 |
|
|