Interesting, I'm afraid there's no way of knowing until some brave person kicks the tires and takes it out for a spin around the block so to speak. David Ferrin www.jaws-users.com ----- Original Message ----- From: Denny Huff To: jaws-users-list@googlegroups.com Sent: Thursday, March 29, 2007 2:28 PM Subject: [JAWS-Users] Re: U3 Thumb Drive
David, Yes, it does require U3 compatible software that will work on the drive. I know Jaws won't be able to be run from the thumb drive, but was wondering if the applications installed on the thumb drive would be able to be read with Jaws. This is an old article, but here is more information about the U3 thumb drive. Applications Launch from USB Drives U3 and partners add smarts to thumb drives, so users can carry desktops in their pockets. Technology startup U3 is expected to announce Monday the release of USB drives based on its smart computing platform, which lets applications run directly off USB drives, independent of other storage devices. Smart USB drives based on U3's software and hardware platform will allow users to carry their entire PC in a USB drive, so that when they hook up to a PC on the road, it will have the same look and feel as their work or home PC. Vendors Ready USB smart drives are expected to be announced by hardware vendors including SanDisk and Verbatim at Demofall, occurring this week in Huntington Beach, California. Several software vendors, including America Online and the Mozilla Foundation, are expected to announce products that run directly off the USB smart drives. "U3's concept is about taking your whole personal workspace with you, not just the data, but the files, folders, preferences, plug-ins, settings, everything you need, to make any PC feel and look and act like your own," said Kate Purmal, CEO of U3. Applications on a U3-compliant USB drive are not tied to a specific laptop or desktop, but are installed and launchable directly off the drive, Purmal said. The capability to run applications directly off USB smart drives gives mobile users the choice of whether to work off their laptop or safely use a public computer, Purmal said. Users are already happy with the simplicity and portability of USB drives, she said. "You just plug them in and they work," Purmal said. Supporting Products Verbatim will include U3's smart computing platform in its $99 1GB Store 'n' Go U3 Smart Drive, which is expected to be launched at Demofall. Kingston will introduce the DataTraveler line of USB smart drives with capacities of 512MB, priced at $42, and 1GB for $80. SanDisk, which backs U3 financially along with M-Systems Flash Disk Pioneers, is also expected to announce U3-compliant smart drives at Demofall. A few big software vendors are also expected to launch U3-compatible products at Demofall. Mozilla is expected to announce U3-compliant versions of the Firefox Web browser and Thunderbird e-mail client. McAfee will announce an antivirus engine to protect U3 smart drives from viruses. America Online will announce a version of Winamp that will allow users to play audio and video files directly off USB smart drives. Products already available for U3 smart drives includes Powerhouse Technologies Group's Migo, which can synchronize office files, folders, and Outlook e-mail data between a computer and a U3 smart drive. "That's what makes it possible to leave my laptop at the office and not carry it home, I just carry my U3 [smart drive] home now," as Migo synchronizes and sends to the smart drive all the laptop data she needs, Purmal said. Siber Systems' Pass2Go, announced in June, lets users store Web site passwords, contacts, and banking and credit card information on a USB smart drive. Skype Technologies has a version of its Voice over Internet Protocol product that lets users carry their Skype account information on U3-compliant drives and make VOIP calls from around the world directly off the drive. More companies are expected to announce U3-compliant smart drives and software in the future, Purmal said. Product Specs Once a U3-compatible smart drive is plugged into a USB 2.0 port, a U3 Launchpad automatically opens so users can run applications from the drive, Purmal said. When the USB drive is pulled out, system software automatically shuts down applications running on the USB drive and cleans out data fragments so no personal data is left behind, Purmal said. The Launchpad also has a menu for drive management and administration as well as a link that leads users to a Web site where U3-compliant software is available, Purmal said. The U3 system software makes it possible for other applications to run directly off the smart drive. It takes up 6MB of storage and loads up in about 30 seconds after a drive is plugged in, Purmal said. Once the system software is loaded, software applications load quickly. "I haven't see any difference between launching [software applications] from the U3 drive versus launching it from a hard drive," she said. It currently supports only Windows XP and Windows 2000, and a Linux version is under works, Purmal said. --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ Visit the JAWS Users List home page at: http://www.jaws-users.com Address for the list archives: http://www.mail-archive.com/jaws-users-list%40googlegroups.com/ In order to contact the management team simply fill out the following form found at: http://www.jaws-users.com/contact.php You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "JAWS Users List" group. To post to this group, send email to jaws-users-list@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/jaws-users-list?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---