Toshiba 640GB Portable Hard Drive Review

Update: This giveaway is now closed and timtim is the winner. Thank you for entering, and please keep an eye out for future Gear Diary giveaways! 🙂

Toshiba 640GB Portable Hard Drive Review

I was sent a Toshiba 640GB Portable Hard Drive in “Rocket Red” to review, but since this one will also be given away, I was hesitant to use and abuse it like I might a memory device I would be keeping. Therefore, in return for this micro-review, you get a chance to win a pocket-size time capsule just waiting to be filled with your important documents and digital memories.

Measuring approximately 5″ long x 3″ wide x 0.6″ thick, this Toshiba drive has no buttons and only one port – a mini USB located on the left side. Included in the box is a 12″ long USB cable, and a warranty booklet in nine languages.

Toshiba 640GB Portable Hard Drive Review

Setup is simple – just plug the mini USB into the drive and connect to your computer and wait for the blue LED on the bottom left to indicate that the drive is engaged.

I was annoyed at first that I had to carry a separate cable to make the hard drive work, as opposed to one that was built into the device, but this honestly makes more sense – – cables can fail, and if the cable is built into the hard drive, it will not be easily replaceable. Sure, it’s one more thing to carry, but the cable is small enough not to be too obnoxious.

Features:

  • USB powered for easy plug and play operation
  • Small footprint for space-saving and easy portability
  • Easy-to-use Windows and Mac backup software
  • Password-protected data encryption
  • File & Folder backup and recovery
  • Drive Space Alert
  • Complete system backup and recovery (Windows only)
  • Internal shock sensor and ramp loading technology help protect your drive and data
  • Preloaded backup software provides an easy-to-use interface to make your backups effortless

Specifications:

  • Interface: USB 2.0 with up to 480Mb/s transfer rate
  • Rotational Speed: Up to 5400RPM
  • Average Seek Time: 12ms
  • Cache Buffer: 8MB
  • Preloaded software: NTI® Backup Now EZ™ for PC; NTI® Shadow™ 4 for Mac
  • Dimensions & Weight: 3.2” W x 5.0” D x 0.65” H; 6 oz
  • System requirements: Windows 72, Windows XP, Vista , Mac OS 10.4 or later; one USB 2.0 port
  • In the box: One Toshiba Portable External Hard Drive, USB 2.0 Cable and Quick Install Guide
  • Three-year limited warranty

I use a Mac, so my obvious choice for using this hard drive would be to simply plug it in and then select it for use with Time Machine, but there is also a registered copy of Shadow 4 included for those who would like to try something new. Windows users can select the NTI Backup Now EZ option; those using 7 will want to download the compatibility patch. When you first plug-in the hard drive, it will sense what type system you are using and (assuming you are on a MAc), it will ask if you would like the hard drive to be formatted for Mac only or so that it can also be read by Windows PCs; I suggest you select the latter, as every time I have set a hard drive up for Mac only, I’ve later needed to connect it to a Windows box for something. 😛

The Toshiba 640GB Portable Hard Drive in “Rocket Red” is available from Toshiba Direct and other retailers.

MSRP: $129.99, but it can be found for less than $90

What I Like: A huge amount of memory in a portable hard drive

What Needs Improvement: Having to use an external cable does mean one more thing to carry — but it also means if the cable fails it can be replaced

How To Win:

Leave a comment telling me the size of your largest external backup solution (portable or desktop) and a rough guess of what you paid for it. I will choose one random winner at Midnight, Monday March 15. I’ll email the winner and also post an announcement on Tuesday the 16th, so keep an eye out …

I’ll ship anywhere in the world, so good luck to all who enter! 🙂

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About the Author

Judie Lipsett Stanford
Judie is the co-owner and Editor-in-Chief of Gear Diary, which she founded in September 2006. She started in 1999 writing software reviews at the now-defunct smaller.com; from mid-2000 through 2006, she wrote hardware reviews for and co-edited at The Gadgeteer. A recipient of the Sigma Kappa Colby Award for Technology, Judie is best known for her device-agnostic approach, deep-dive reviews, and enjoyment of exploring the latest tech, gadgets, and gear.

10 Comments on "Toshiba 640GB Portable Hard Drive Review"

  1. andreasr2d2 | March 12, 2010 at 5:16 pm |

    I’m using a 1TB Western Digital Free Agent right now for backups. I think it was about $120 over at Staples a year or two ago. The Toshiba would be perfect for backing up my laptop on the go. Thank you for the chance to enter this giveaway!

  2. andrew_lee | March 12, 2010 at 5:19 pm |

    I don’t have an external backup solution yet, unless you count copying important files to flash drives. My largest flash drive is 2 GB, which I got for around $10.

  3. mine is a Verbatim external 500gb drive and I think it was around £50 uk pounds, had to get it to back up laptop

  4. spencerkellis | March 12, 2010 at 5:35 pm |

    my largest external backup solution is a windows home server (hp ex485) with 3.75TB of space (four total hard drives, 3 1TB and the original 750GB). total cost for the server + extra hard drives was around $750.

  5. My largest external backup is a 160 GB hard drive from an elderly neighbor’s defunct PC that he let me have after I restored his old files to his new computer. I use that drive in conjunction with a USB cable to my computer to backup data on my home PC.

  6. My current backup disk for my iMac is a 1GB Lacie d2 Quadra. I think I paid $200 Canadian for it. Love the speed of the FW800, but would also like something a bit more portable.

  7. The only backup I have is a collection of 3 Kingston 2GB thumbdrives, and all I have backed up on those is my photo collection. I can no longer remember what I paid for them.

  8. 500 GB Time Capsule for $269.00 to back up 4 macs… pretty much full
    USB flash drive for misc stuff

  9. 500gb for about $125.

  10. 300GB WD My Book. Paid about $100 for it a few years ago.

Comments are closed.