Fuuvi Pick is a flash drive – digital camera combo


Digital cameras have memory cards that can connect directly to a USB port, or through wires. Fuuvi Pick does away with the middleman and the hassle of removing the memory card, by converting the mini camera into a flash drive as well. The 3.1 megapixel camera shoots images in 1280×1024 resolution and has a built-in USB flash drive for easy interfacing. Fuuvi Pick weighs just 24 grams and stores data on a microSD card. Priced at $60.

Via: Geeky-Gadgets

Steampunk USB cufflinks


Steampunk USB cufflinks mix style with tech and give you the pleasure of carrying data in your sleeve. Not that it is difficult to carry flash drives, but carrying them in cufflinks is so much more cooler. Each of these has 8gigs of storage, and would have cost you $225, “would have” because they were sold out on Etsy.

Via: Engadget, SlipperyBrick

NES transformed into USB flash drive!



Popularity of the flash drives owes much to their portability. And while the drives may take on numerous designer styles, this particular drive goes over the top. This DIY effort converted an entire NES, together with its Tetris cartridge, into a USB flash drive. Definitely not the most portable thing around, and not that easy to connect either.

Via: Instructables, Engadget

Flashkus flash drive concept stores data in cardboard


Flashkus concept flash drives are simple cardboard packages for holding the data. Envisioned by studio Art Lebedev, these disposable flash enjoy company of their peers in cardboard, and when you need to store data, you simply pull one off the board and use it. You can write information about the data directly on the drive (it is cardboard). Made from cardboard, these drives obviously won’t have a long life unless you’re utterly careful with them, so the idea of disposable drives can stick. But unless they’re dirt cheap as compared to contemporary drives, a disposable flash drive makes little sense.

Via: Art Lebedev, technabob

LaCie Galet flash drives come in an elegant package

The demand for elegantly designed products isn’t ever likely to go down, not even if they are ridiculously overpriced, and certainly not if they’re just plain overpriced. If you’ve got the money, now is the day for you to realize you’ve always wanted a pebble shaped, silver plated flash drive. They’ve thrown in a “charming” gift box for good measure for the $152 flash drive.

Via: LaCie, SlashGear