Reddit Reddit reviews SanDisk Cruzer Fit 8GB USB 2.0 Low-Profile Flash Drive- SDCZ33-008G-B35

We found 16 Reddit comments about SanDisk Cruzer Fit 8GB USB 2.0 Low-Profile Flash Drive- SDCZ33-008G-B35. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Computer Accessories & Peripherals
Electronics
Computers & Accessories
SanDisk Cruzer Fit 8GB USB 2.0 Low-Profile Flash Drive- SDCZ33-008G-B35
LED to monitor drive's activityPassword protect and encrypt private files with SanDisk SecureAcces softwareTiny, Portable flash driveBacked by a 2-year limited warrantyAdd Files Easily with Drag-and-drop File Loading
Check price on Amazon

16 Reddit comments about SanDisk Cruzer Fit 8GB USB 2.0 Low-Profile Flash Drive- SDCZ33-008G-B35:

u/freythman · 4 pointsr/homelab

There's always this. It will put you at 3 ports. Or this for 2. Then instead of installing ESXi to the mSATA SSD, get one of these. At least, that's what I'm looking to do in the next few months. The new NUC units support "custom lids" so I'm hoping to find a way to make it all look nice by either ordering a different lid, or having one 3D printed to house the additional NIC.

u/DrKC9N · 3 pointsr/linuxadmin

I carry my keys on a tiny USB, along with putty.exe and putty.reg.

Edit: Didn't interpret OP this way, but this is good practice for a lone admin but not for the admin of admins or users. Also in my environment only servers are Li/Unix.

u/happycamp2000 · 2 pointsr/Ubiquiti

I had my EdgeRouter Lite's USB drive die after four years. I bought mine in 2013 and the USB drive died a month ago.

I replaced it with this drive:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B005FYNSUA/

I followed these steps:
https://help.ubnt.com/hc/en-us/articles/204959514-EdgeRouter-Last-resort-recovery-of-failed-EdgeOS-device

One key point is that when it says installation finished, I noticed that I should wait a minute or so. As I believe it was still writing data to the USB drive, even though it said it was done. First time I did it, it didn't work right. Second time I waited and it worked.

And so far it is working fine.

u/[deleted] · 2 pointsr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

The SadBot looks awesome in men's large.

Happy Birthday Kramdiw

I would add this item to mine

u/deedlede2222 · 2 pointsr/DarkNetMarketsNoobs

I got this because I can literally eat it. Let me get you an Amazon link. I can confirm it works too. 8GB

Edit: SanDisk Cruzer Fit 8GB USB 2.0 Low-Profile Flash Drive- SDCZ33-008G-B35 https://www.amazon.com/dp/B005FYNSUA/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awd_8jC8wbWYX4DK3

u/qupada42 · 2 pointsr/Ubiquiti

Chances are you need to find a USB2 flash drive, I've never had luck with USB3 ones for this kind of thing.

Something like this ought to do the trick: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B005FYNSUA

u/insomniasexx · 2 pointsr/ethereum

Amazon links from our internal policies document. We opt for more reputable flash drives over the cheap megapacks. If you do opt for a megapack, get 2 or 3 different brands. Getting an 8 pack of the same brand means if 1 fails, they will all fail (within similar timelines, especially since they are likely from same batch):

u/frequencyvoid · 1 pointr/homelab

AFAIK not all drivers (in this case, older PERC/SAS) drivers are available in 6.0's pre-install environment (Separate to the installed environment). You might have to inject a VIB for the controller, or perferably, use a USB stick. I know you say someone will yank it, but perhaps grab something like this which might not be as noticable (maybe even stick some tape over it when it's in!) ~ http://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Cruzer-Low-Profile-Drive-SDCZ33-008G-B35/dp/B005FYNSUA

u/SirEDCaLot · 1 pointr/VOIP

Yeah I figured going international would lower speed / add latency, but I don't think that's the fault of your fiber. Still pretty nice tho. Here in the US I get about 100mbps down with less than half that as upload, for about $70-80usd/mo (they raise the prices every so often...).

If you forward the number to a VoIP number, then you don't need gateways or Digium cards (since you will never interact with it as an analog line). That's why I suggested that would be a good option to get started easy and cheap. And if things aren't working just turn off the forwarding and you're back to analog.

If you have an existing Ubuntu server that can work. You'll need to install DAHDI (the software that runs the Digium cards), Asterisk, and FreePBX packages yourself (which seems like a lot of doing). FreePBX makes things a lot easier- you can use Asterisk without FreePBX (I've done it back in the days before FreePBX was a thing) but there's a MUCH MUCH steeper learning curve.

My advice for you would be to virtualize. Take whatever box is running your Ubuntu, and use VMWare Converter to turn that Ubuntu instance into a virtual machine. Then wipe the box, throw in a super low profile USB drive or cheap SSD, install VMWare free version onto that, and format the machine's HDD as a VMFS datastore. Then move the (shrunk) image of your old install into that, fire it up, and make a new VM to run the official FreePBX distro. If you prefer F/OSS there's a few free hypervisors such as Xen or oVirt/KVM. You might have to upgrade the RAM in your box (and RAID isn't a bad idea either) but it makes things a lot easier to deal with.

pfSense- pfSense is JUST a router. They have some hardware with 4+ ports but those are individual ports, no hardware switch chip inside.
You might also give Ubiquiti UniFi a shot. Here's a nice case study for a large home. Only thing I'll warn you is the GUI for UniFi WiFi and switching is excellent, but for routing a lot of the features aren't exposed to GUI yet. UBNT also has the EdgeMax series of routers which have a different GUI (direct web gui on the device, not through a management controller) which are a bit more feature complete (still lots of features as CLI-only, but that's improving, and at least on EdgeMax you can easily access the CLI to make changes).

u/Aperture_Kubi · 1 pointr/sysadmin

Ditto, as a matter of fact that's probably why I'm getting away with one of these in my homelab tower.

u/Charwinger21 · 1 pointr/hardware

>How about something like this?

>http://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Cruzer-Low-Profile-Drive--SDCZ33-008G-B35/dp/B005FYNSUA/

That's not as deep, but it is taller.

I'm more a fan of the patriot flex flat design, and we will probably be able to see a similar type c version in the future.

Thickness is very important for certain use cases.

u/mrcaptncrunch · 1 pointr/linuxquestions

My server runs on one of these, http://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Cruzer-Low-Profile-Drive--SDCZ33-008G-B35/dp/B005FYNSUA/ref=sr_1_2?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1414464180&sr=1-2&keywords=Sandisk+8gb+micro+usb


It manages a mdadm raid array of 6 drives, also has a few external drives for redundancy of some data, and has nginx, virtualbox and a php gui for virtualbox. Everything else is in the hard drives.

u/bang_switch40 · 1 pointr/homelab

I guess I'm just used to having usb ports on the MOBO. I thought it was cool that the HP Micro Servers even have a micro SD slot right next to the USB port (on the mobo as well) so you have 2 options for installation. If you must put a usb drive outside the case, these little guys work great!

u/maratc · 1 pointr/mac