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Previously on "Them USB flash thingies"

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  • Joe Black
    replied
    This guy has the perfect solution:



    Good for 160GB apparently (can be extended), though occasional problems of leakage apparently...bit like The Master's suggestion I guess.

    Leave a comment:


  • janey
    replied
    Originally posted by Fleetwood
    At Bordeaux airport once an old granny in front of me was stopped because the scanner thingy beeped as she went through. They found a metal vibrator in her inside pocket. She was clearly embarassed and said it was "for her piles".

    True but





    Leave a comment:


  • Fleetwood
    replied
    At Bordeaux airport once an old granny in front of me was stopped because the scanner thingy beeped as she went through. They found a metal vibrator in her inside pocket. She was clearly embarassed and said it was "for her piles".

    True but

    Leave a comment:


  • The Master
    replied
    All the more reason to store any valuable magnetic media up your ass.

    Leave a comment:


  • Not So Wise
    replied
    Originally posted by bogeyman
    Yet many pro photographers carry flash cards (with their irreplaceable assignment shoots on) in and out of airports, everyday without incident.
    Remember a story a few years back of a group of wildlife documentary makers who spent about a year filming something or another in the deep dark jungles of Africa.

    When they were done and arrived back in the UK some plod told them to put their equipment though the X-ray machines, the guys were naturally concerned so explained what kind of stuff they had, guy told them it was all perfectly safe as they had upgraded the machines so they did not cause damage.

    Result? Everything wiped and a year’s work down the drain.
    Last edited by Not So Wise; 4 May 2006, 11:59.

    Leave a comment:


  • The Master
    replied
    Try concealing your memory sticks where the sun don't shine. No need to put them through the X-ray machine then.

    Leave a comment:


  • Swamp Thing
    replied
    Had some grief with the Germans (don’t we all?) at Hamburg Lubeck airport. My laptop, USB sticks & ext HDD got a thorough examination by a rather comely-but-strict officer. She was so suspicious about all the equipment that I got a load of quickfire questions, then she ordered me to stand on a pallet while she took my shoes away for checking. And we were so close to small talk too. SO there I was, coatless, beltless, shoeless, standing on a pallet; I thought, they’ll be asking me to go into the ‘showers’ next…

    Leave a comment:


  • ASB
    replied
    Originally posted by darmstadt
    My artifical vagina did cause some problems though.
    I followed a lady through security at one airport who had a bag check because the scanner didn't like it. She certainly seemed to have some interesting products. And a very red face.

    Leave a comment:


  • darmstadt
    replied
    Originally posted by The Master
    Fortunately most security conscious airports won't let you not put a laptop or whatever through the scanner. If you start making a fuss at the scanner they say, "look, sir, you've got three choices - put it through the scanner, go back and check it in as hold luggage, or leave it here with me to dispose of down the local pub as soon as I'm off-duty".
    At Newcastle yesterday they couldn't be bothered with me taking my laptops out but at Schipol I had to take them both out. At Frankfurt I only had to take one out but open my bag so the other was visible. At some airports, namely the USA, I've actually had to power them up. I carry a number of USB flash memory devices, ranging from 15 mb to 80 gb and never had a problem. I also carry 2 spare hard drives, also never a problem. My artifical vagina did cause some problems though.

    Leave a comment:


  • TheMonkey
    replied
    Originally posted by bogeyman
    Yet many pro photographers carry flash cards (with their irreplaceable assignment shoots on) in and out of airports, everyday without incident.

    I think the low-dose x-ray sources used in today's scanners wouldn't trouble a flash card (or your internal organs) much.
    It's a probability thing. It does happen. I lost a SanDisk 512M going through customs at Zurich last year. Then again they probably do that on purpose being the swiss. Good job I zapped it onto a CDR.

    Leave a comment:


  • Joe Black
    replied
    Safest bet I guess would be simply to stick the thing in your pocket and walk through the metal detectors as I'd be surprised if it went off...or alternatively just use memory cards and an adaptor, e.g.

    Leave a comment:


  • bogeyman
    replied
    Originally posted by TheMonkey
    X-Rays can kill FLASH memory dead - permanently. X-Rays are relatively high energy and can penetrate the chip casing because of the short wavelength. This causes the memory cells to get ionised which changes the data consequentially ******* up the filesystem on the device. If enough energy is applied the transistor junction will break down. FLASH is mass produced poorly manufactured crap these days so it's more prone to trouble.
    Yet many pro photographers carry flash cards (with their irreplaceable assignment shoots on) in and out of airports, everyday without incident.

    I think the low-dose x-ray sources used in today's scanners wouldn't trouble a flash card (or your internal organs) much.

    Leave a comment:


  • TheMonkey
    replied
    X-Rays can kill FLASH memory dead - permanently. X-Rays are relatively high energy and can penetrate the chip casing because of the short wavelength. This causes the memory cells to get ionised which changes the data consequentially ******* up the filesystem on the device. If enough energy is applied the transistor junction will break down. FLASH is mass produced poorly manufactured crap these days so it's more prone to trouble.

    Leave a comment:


  • Joe Black
    replied
    Originally posted by ASB
    All airports I have used in the last couple of years - with the exception of UK - insist it's removed from ithe carrier and placed through the scanner on its own. Montreal onve were asking everybody to power them up. Boy does that slow down security.
    Had that a couple of times as well.

    What does it prove though? Any terrorist smart enough could simply bring along one of those desktop style notebooks with a multi-compartment bay and some C4/Semtex stuffed inside and they wouldn't know the difference.


    Edit: perhaps that's why MacBooks used to display a little bomb logo when then crashed.
    Last edited by Joe Black; 3 May 2006, 17:06.

    Leave a comment:


  • MrsGoof
    replied
    Originally posted by sasguru
    A little thick-skinned, aren't you?
    wot, like one of them Lizards

    Leave a comment:

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