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Greg Alsobrook
04-17-09, 09:19 AM
Just wondering who here takes the time to "Safely Remove Hardware" and "Stop" the drive before yanking it out... :grin:

Stuart Sweet
04-17-09, 09:22 AM
90% of the time I do safely remove. If I haven't written to the drive I'm less careful.

sideswipe
04-17-09, 09:37 AM
maybe twice in 8yrs have I did this & only then because of the the massive backups did @ that time w/irreplaceable material (family pics/movies)

spartanstew
04-17-09, 09:38 AM
Haven't done that in a few years.

braven
04-17-09, 10:35 AM
I always do. It's just a couple extra mouse clicks. Big deal.

wingrider01
04-17-09, 11:37 AM
Always do, have had to reciver the directory structure on a couple of flash drives that the end users pulled out without following the proper proceedures

Milkman
04-17-09, 11:44 AM
I was looking for the option marked "Most of the time", but didn't see one. Instead voted on Sometimes.

hdtvfan0001
04-17-09, 11:44 AM
Heck no...defeats the purpose of being convenient. :D

Hansen
04-17-09, 11:55 AM
Never realized you need to do that until seeing your post. Always wondered what that little icon was for in system tray. Good know.

Spanky_Partain
04-17-09, 12:07 PM
Just wondering who here takes the time to "Safely Remove Hardware" and "Stop" the drive before yanking it out... :grin:

Only with older versions of Linux that do not auto remove the mount after pulling the FLASH drive. :D

JcT21
04-17-09, 01:51 PM
sometimes is what i voted. but most of the time i usually dont safely remove it.

Steve Mehs
04-17-09, 02:36 PM
I've been using flash drives since '03, and I've never done it. Never hand any problems either.

Ira Lacher
04-17-09, 02:44 PM
Yanked it once on a Windows XP PC and corrupted the Word doc I spent 3 hours writing. Never again. Happened on a Mac too.

Canis Lupus
04-17-09, 03:03 PM
Get a Mac will ya?

Just wondering who here takes the time to "Safely Remove Hardware" and "Stop" the drive before yanking it out... :grin:

Thaedron
04-17-09, 03:05 PM
Maybe I voted incorrectly. I most always 'eject' the drive. I don't think I've ever done the safely remove hardware thing for USB drives.

Thaedron
04-17-09, 03:06 PM
I was looking for the option marked "Most of the time", but didn't see one. Instead voted on Sometimes.

I would have voted 'most of the time' as well, but opted for yes.

Grentz
04-17-09, 03:34 PM
Depends on the OS.

OSX I do as if I dont it screws up the drive for the next time I try to put it in a Windows machine. XP I dont, Vista I dont, 2000 I do as it sometimes can corrupt the drive if you dont. On XP/Vista if the disk is set as portable it should be fine to yank it out as long as it is done reading/writing (you can tell by the status light on the flash drive itself).

I do properly eject my backup hard disks though, that way I know they have completed writing everything properly and securely.

Sirshagg
04-17-09, 03:53 PM
Work - 99% of the time
Personal - 5% of the time

Caddo-Miller
04-18-09, 04:54 AM
I do not, after using my Windows XP USB Drive Hardware properties option to set Policies > Write Caching and Safe Removal > Optimize for Quick Removal (See Attachment).

http://www.dbstalk.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=18125&d=1240052017

Charise
04-18-09, 12:26 PM
I don't know enough NOT to "safely remove" them. I haven't had problems, so I just continue to do it. :-)

Nick
04-18-09, 12:40 PM
I don't know enough NOT to "safely remove" them. I haven't had problems, so I just continue to do it. :-)I...must...obey...I...must...obey.

:sure:

Stewart Vernon
04-18-09, 09:52 PM
Absolutely yes, and I'll tell you why.

My first PC had a caching SCSI controller. Really cool and super fast, BUT I had some faulty RAM and found out in a hurry just what happens if you think you saved something but the cache was never purged so the data never was actually written to the hard drive.

Flash (pun intended) to the present... I don't even want to introduce the possibility that something I thought I saved wasn't actually written yet because I yanked the flash drive before it flushed everything... so I always make sure I software-eject before physically ejecting the drive.

Tom Robertson
04-18-09, 09:58 PM
I do not, after using my Windows XP USB Drive Hardware properties option to set Policies > Write Caching and Safe Removal > Optimize for Quick Removal (See Attachment).


What he said. :)

Cheers,
Tom

Groundhog45
04-18-09, 11:23 PM
I always remove "safely". However, I'm glad to read about the setting above and will try that now. :D

Edited to add: It was already set to optimize. I'll be durned.

Grentz
04-19-09, 12:40 AM
Edited to add: It was already set to optimize. I'll be durned.

Yup, most of the time with flash drives it knows they are flash drives and sets it as such ;)

wingrider01
04-19-09, 06:00 AM
I do not, after using my Windows XP USB Drive Hardware properties option to set Policies > Write Caching and Safe Removal > Optimize for Quick Removal (See Attachment).

http://www.dbstalk.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=18125&d=1240052017

does this have to be set for each USB flash drive?

P Smith
04-19-09, 10:22 AM
This parameter set by default, ie no caching writing data at all and USB ready to removal instantly.

Sharkie_Fan
04-19-09, 04:28 PM
On my Macs, at home and at work, I do it 'right' 99% of the time.

On the PCs.... rarely.

I don't know why, but that's how I am... :)

Caddo-Miller
04-20-09, 02:25 AM
does this have to be set for each USB flash drive?

Yes, the setting is USB Drive specific.

vankai
04-20-09, 02:59 AM
I want the users I support to know about this option, so Yes for me as a habit and as an example to others.

wingrider01
04-20-09, 05:41 AM
Yes, the setting is USB Drive specific.

Given the number of USB flash drives I use it is not worth setting this for every one of them. Will just keep right clicking the icon for safely remove

Marlin Guy
04-20-09, 10:58 AM
The wording of the poll is somewhat biased. The word "properly" should not be there. Since Windows XP, the need to stop USB drives before removing has not existed.
Just make sure that you give the system to complete the last write and you're fine.

Grentz
04-20-09, 01:04 PM
Yes, the setting is USB Drive specific.

It actually automatically sets it for most drives though, as it knows they are removable flash drives.

Greg Alsobrook
04-20-09, 02:42 PM
The wording of the poll is somewhat biased. The word "properly" should not be there.

What exactly is that showing a bias towards? :confused:

Grentz
04-20-09, 07:23 PM
What exactly is that showing a bias towards? :confused:

Bias towards stopping it, since you say "properly "Stop" a USB flash drive" which would imply that not stopping it would be the improper way. It is a nit pick of grammar though, I didnt even notice it before anyone had said anything :p

We are on the internet, its fine in my book :lol:

smiddy
04-21-09, 06:08 AM
I voted sometimes. It depends on the situation, I have had to yank them because the OS was unable to stop it and I've had to yank them because of time. But if I am not in a hurry, and things go right, I will stop it and then remove it.

ncxcstud
04-21-09, 08:43 AM
I never 'safely removed' a flash drive ;)

But, i haven't used a USB flash drive on my PC since I installed the Windows Office Live beta on my laptop and desktop :)

I have no need for flash drives anymore :)

Most of the stuff i used them for were for papers so i could print them off at the school library...now I just go to my office live account on the net and print it from there.

Tom Robertson
04-21-09, 08:49 AM
I have several from CES and other gift, rarely used them until recently. Good for BIOS updates on some devices, and I have a Win98 bootable (DOS only) one with memtest.

Next project might be an XP bootable one since flashing my phone works much better under XP.

Cheers,
Tom

MicroBeta
04-21-09, 10:11 AM
I try to do it every time. Every once and a while I forget. I'd say >95% of the time I do it right.

Mike

Hansen
04-22-09, 06:29 PM
It seems that one does not have to remove a USB drive from one's jeans' pocket before running them through the wash. Remarkably, had one go through the wash and it worked perfectly afterwards. No need to safely remove before washing.

Charise
04-23-09, 10:52 AM
I...must...obey...I...must...obey.

:sure:

:lol: