Has Western Digital found an edge with its
slimmest My Passport yet?
Western Digital My Passport Edge 500GB
Each year, hardware makers pick a theme,
and this year's theme is 'sleek'. I know this because every product launch uses
the word, and the one promoting the new Western Digital My Passport Edge is no
exception.
We're meant to accept that this drive is
better than the previous My Passport design because it's thinner, even if I
didn't notice that model had been eating all the pies. This one is 12.8mm deep,
and the old 'Essentials' design was a portly 1 5mm - a whole 2.2mm thicker.
However, this device is about more than being supermodel-slim, thankfully.
Testing the drive on a USB 3.0 port, the
Edge is very snappy indeed. File transfers will hurtle along according to my
benchmarks, which recorded read performance of 116,616KB/s and writing at
105,447KB/s. That's quicker than many older internal drives and perfect for a
business person wanting to make that train with all his files fully synchronized.
To that end, Western Digital has also
preloaded the Edge with some rather slick software that can automate the live
duplication of folders to the drive. It's not the only software perk it offers;
it also has a straightforward tool that secures the drive with a password.
Western Digital claims it has hardware encryption, but I'm not sure if it
really means it encrypts the whole drive. Whatever it does, it should stop most
people accessing the contents should the Edge be stolen.
I like Western Digital's thinking in this
respect, because you can buy cheap external drives that work perfectly well,
but without these utilities they often won't have the files you want on them
when it's critical.
However, I also recall the previous version
of WD Smartware was not easily removable once installed, though this one seemed
amenable to that option. What it won't do is work with external drives that
aren't by Western Digital, annoyingly
I have two bigger problems with the new
Edge, and the first is the price, which is nearly double what you can get the
old My Passport Essential 500GB for. That's on the high side, even when you
factor in some of the nice new software features. Perhaps we shouldn't complain
too loudly, though, because the Mac-specific version of this unit is another
$13 for no good reason other than it's preformatted for that OS and has been
styled to look like an iPhone.
The other point is that at 500GB, this is
hardly the largest capacity of portable storage available, and there are bigger
drives even in the My Passport range.
The new My Passport Edge is a
well-constructed and decidedly clean design that offers performance and
elegance in a single package. However, it's also at least $16 more than it
should be, even with some genuinely useful software included. It does come with
a three-year warranty, which might come in useful if you're inherently unlucky
with storage.
Details
Price: $149
Manufacturer: Asetek/Thermaltake
Required spec: One free 120mm rear fan
mount,
Intel sockets: LGA775,
LGA1155,LGA1156, LGA1366, LGA2011;
AMD sockets: FM1,AM2,AM2+, AM3,AM3+
Interface: USB 3.0 and USB 2.0
Capacity: 500 GB
Size: Height 12.8 mm Depth 110 mm
Width 81.6 mm
Weight: 0.134 kg
Temperature Operating: 5°C to 35°C
Temperature Non-operating: -20°C to
65°C
Default Format: NTFS
Package Includes: Portable hard drive;
USB cable: WD Smart Ware software;
Quick install guide
|