The reactor klaxon began to blare.
Standard devices typically operate on the USB 2.0 protocol, although some are marketed as USB 3.0 compatible.
vendor ID. These drives were notorious. They were the "VendorCo" units—often sold as 64GB or 128GB, but internally built with recycled or re-marked flash chips that were actually much smaller. His particular specimen claimed to be 64GB, but the FirstChip FC1178 controller
The reactor klaxon began to blare.
Standard devices typically operate on the USB 2.0 protocol, although some are marketed as USB 3.0 compatible.
vendor ID. These drives were notorious. They were the "VendorCo" units—often sold as 64GB or 128GB, but internally built with recycled or re-marked flash chips that were actually much smaller. His particular specimen claimed to be 64GB, but the FirstChip FC1178 controller