I refused to believe this coin-sized gadget was a storage drive, until I tried it for myself
Briefly

I refused to believe this coin-sized gadget was a storage drive, until I tried it for myself
"It's definitely the smallest thumb drive I've tested, measuring 0.73 inches at its widest point and weighing just three grams. It looks more like a USB dongle for a mouse than external storage. The ExtremeFit's size isn't the only thing going for it, though. It also offers a wide range of storage options, ranging from 1TB for $109 to 64GB on the low end for just $15."
"SanDisk promises USB 3.2 Gen 1 speeds of up to 400MB/s on the 128GB and 1TB versions, with compatibility across Windows, MacOS, and iPadOS. I went hands-on with the 64GB storage option, and got read and write speeds in CrystalDiskMark that came very close to the 400MB/s mark -- certainly fast enough for everyday use. In practice, this means extremely fast transfer speeds for large image or video files, as well as near-instant transfers for documents, spreadsheets, slide decks, and presentations."
The SanDisk ExtremeFit USB-C flash drive measures 0.73 inches at its widest point and weighs three grams, resembling a USB dongle more than traditional external storage. Storage capacities range from 64GB for about $15 up to 1TB for $109. SanDisk advertises USB 3.2 Gen 1 speeds up to 400MB/s on select capacities; hands-on testing of a 64GB unit produced read and write speeds close to 400MB/s. The drive works with Windows, MacOS, and iPadOS, and file transfers on a Chromebook functioned despite no explicit ChromeOS claim. No software is required, though SanDisk's Memory Zone app can assist with backups.
Read at ZDNET
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