Western Digital My Passport Essential 320 GB USB 2.0 Portable Hard Drive WDME3200TN
- Box Contents – My Passport Essential 320GB Portable USB Hard Drive, USB 2.0 cable, Quick Install guide
- 320GB Hard Drive Capacity
- Installation is a snap because you don’t really install this drive; you just plug it in and it’s ready to use.
- Powered by the USB bus. No separate power supply is needed
- This ultra-portable drive fits easily in your pocket or purse, weighs only a few ounces, and holds tons of valuable data
These elegant portable drives are simple to use, light and easy to carry, and require no power adapter — they are powered directly through the USB cable. Pack up your office files and take them home. Carry thousands of songs or pictures. Synchronize files between home and office and encrypt everything on the drive for added security. WD Sync synchronization and encryption software lets you take your critical data with you. Plug My Passport into any PC, edit files, read e-mail, and view photos. Then sync all of your changes back to your home or office computer. Your data is protected with 128-bit encryption (Windows only). Perfect for the business traveler who needs to transfer large amounts of data from laptop to clients or just daily backups in case of accidents from mishandled luggage to coffee spills. Also comes in handy if your worried about laptop theft and someone else having access to your important data, you can store it on this portable encrypted drive instead. For all those… More >>
Western Digital My Passport Essential 320 GB USB 2.0 Portable Hard Drive WDME3200TN
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5 comments
CrazianAsian23 on September 6, 2009 at 12:54 pm
I’ve used the Passport Essential for a few weeks now, using it to back-up documents, music, pictures, and videos. I’ve been very happy with the product because of the following aspects:
Size/Portability–the drive is small enough to fit in a shirt or back pocket, really easy to carry around and durable enough to be tossed in my luggage.
Ease of Set-up–I’m not the most computer savvy, but all I needed to do was connect the drive to the USB port and the program booted up automatically. WD offers a program called MySync which allows you to pick what you want to back-up, including email. You can pick what you want to back up pretty easily and be able to port that onto other computers.
Style–simple and sleek, it fits in nicely with just about anything.
V. Barai on September 6, 2009 at 3:31 pm
Please dont buy any Western Digital Passport.. First check there capacity chart. As they using 1000 MB = 1GB and not 1024MB=1GB. Which is eating lost and lost of your space.
V. Barai on September 6, 2009 at 4:46 pm
Please dont buy any Western Digital Passport.. First check there capacity chart. As they using 1000 MB = 1GB and not 1024MB=1GB. Which is eating lost and lost of your space.
Manuel C. Hernandez on September 6, 2009 at 6:41 pm
I bought this MyBook 320GB about 3 months ago… it was always a drag on my system, but last eve it got to be an anchor… today it is nothing more than a doorstop!!! I will never buy (after over 10 years of buying WD HD’s mind you!) another WD product, not if it is the last HD on the face of the Earth!
“What’s your back-up plan?” says their website, I notice no customer comments allowed! My back-up is the 93GB of data on the disc that quit working for me last night and is now dead in the water. DO NOT BUY THIS PRODUCT. I am so mad I could eat 16d nails and spit tacks.
S. Wells on September 6, 2009 at 8:23 pm
Unless you want to spend more money after buying this item, find a hard disk that will actually work as advertised. It won’t work on either of my laptops, and I had to buy from Western Digital’s online store (the only place the device is available) a power cord for $10 + $7 shipping. Western Digital ended up charging me twice for said cord, so that so far it’s cost me $35 and the item has not even shipped. The drive seems cheaply made, too. I’m regretting I wasted my money on it when I could have had something better from Seagate or Toshiba. You might think you are saving money by buying a Passport, but if you have to be overcharged and frustrated when nothing is done about the extra charges, and the device doesn’t work on your computer, you are not saving a thing, but looking to buy yourself a large helping of animosity.