Comments on: From the Great Ideas Dept.: Biodegradable USB keys
A Hong Kong company claims it's the first of its kind.
A Hong Kong company claims it's the first of its kind.
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I agree totally that this usb key made of corn product is great. As far as those excess keys on your desk... Send some my way!! I am a college student who is always running out of space. Or you could contact your local high school and see if they have a use for them.(by the way they will) Kids don't use floppies anymore they use usb keys for saving homework. Some teachers even require that students to turn in they're papers and other homework on usb keys. And granted the price of these wonderful little guys have dropped dramatically there are still those students out there that could really use getting a freebie.
Im with Goobillis, please contact me and send some my way, I have a bunch of tax,mortgage,house,insurance, auto,....( you get the idea)forms that are a pain in the butt to try to store on a CDR.
Not only that, the main components of a flash drive are metal and thus will not break down, almost defeating the purpose.
Use your leftover flash drives to store Data you don't use very often (or never) on your hard drive. At 1GB per, it'll start to pay off quickly. just label what's on them and put them in a box.
I don't have a problem with a food product being used, but an earlier commend was correct, the casing is only the outer covering of the thumb-drive, its main component is a memory chip, which although has silicon (which is elemental) it must be packaged in heat resistant plastic; which won't biodegrade. So overall, I see the negatives outweighing the positives on this one.
- by Steve Jordan October 6, 2008 1:28 PM PDT
- It might not be perfect, but it's a good start. I'd like to see SD cards made out of that stuff, too. As devices evolve to hold more data, the smaller-capacity drives just pile up (I've got a nifty collection, too) until they get thrown away... they are considered "disposable memory," and in this day and age, we don't need more "disposable" products.
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