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ValiDrive

Started by Mr. Analog, October 19, 2023, 07:09:25 AM

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Mr. Analog

Ever wanted to check your thumb drive for errors or malware? There's a tool for that

https://www.grc.com/validrive.htm
By Grabthar's Hammer

Darren Dirt

#1
Good ol' Steve Gibson!

Cool that he's still around:

https://www.grc.com/news.htm

QuoteGRC's Corporate & Steve's Personal
Blog, Twitter & RSS Feeds

Six ways for you to stay in the loop about what's happening here.


Dragged Kicking & Screaming into the 21st Century


They said it would never happen, and they were almost right.

But it's true. GRC and Steve now both have individual Twitter accounts, blogs, and RSS feeds. And it appears to be a good thing.

And speaking of "being in denial about how change is inevitable until finally giving in"...
https://nitter.net/SGgrc/status/1716910106754101621
...VBScript will soon be gone (and that kinda hits me in the feelz -- glad I feel comfortable in Node and Python)
_____________________

Strive for progress. Not perfection.
_____________________

Darren Dirt

Quote from: Mr. Analog on October 19, 2023, 07:09:25 AMEver wanted to check your thumb drive for errors or malware? There's a tool for that

https://www.grc.com/validrive.htm

On topic: YIKES some of these screenshots scare me, as in they they make me scared to test my own USB drives...

https://nitter.net/SGgrc/status/1698756990959550949

_____________________

Strive for progress. Not perfection.
_____________________

Thorin

I think the more eye-opening fact there is that USB drives labeled as 1TB or even 2TB actually only have 64GB of storage inside them, and then some mechanism to intentionally hoodwink the OS into thinking there's more storage. Like, that's an intentional fraud.
Prayin' for a 20!

gcc thorin.c -pedantic -o Thorin
compile successful

Lazybones

Quote from: Thorin on October 25, 2023, 02:47:22 PMI think the more eye-opening fact there is that USB drives labeled as 1TB or even 2TB actually only have 64GB of storage inside them, and then some mechanism to intentionally hoodwink the OS into thinking there's more storage. Like, that's an intentional fraud.

This has been happening for YEARS now.. Used to be an Aliexpress thing then it became common on Amazon.

Even worse are FAKE Samsung EVO NVME drives now.