- Cloud Networking
Cisco Meraki MX vs Traditional Firewalls: A Comparison
11 Mar, 2026
£156.16 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
For £130 ex-VAT, the SanDisk Phone Drive (512GB, USB‑C) is a decent “day-to-day mover” for people who constantly shuttle files between a phone and a laptop—especially if you don’t want to mess around with cables or Wi‑Fi transfers. The big practical win is the USB‑C end being genuinely useful on modern Android devices and many newer laptops. If you regularly back up photos/videos, transfer presentations, or need quick access to documents on the go, it’ll earn its keep quickly and is easy to deploy across a team.
That said, I wouldn’t buy it as a general-purpose “best value” storage stick for everyone. The price puts it closer to more flexible options (or higher-capacity drives) once you factor in that you’re paying for convenience and phone compatibility rather than raw performance. Also, if your users mainly plug into USB‑A devices, you may end up wishing you’d chosen a dual‑connector or USB‑A + USB‑C option. In short: buy it for field workers, marketers, designers, and anyone who lives on a USB‑C phone/laptop combo; think twice if the stick will mostly sit in a desk drawer or be shared with lots of USB‑A only kit.

Samsung
Samsung MUF-512DA - USB flash drive - 512 GB - USB 3.1 Gen 1 / USB-C - secret grey

Kingston
Kingston DataTraveler SE9 G3 - USB flash drive - 64 GB - USB 3.2 Gen 1 - gold

Kingston
Kingston IronKey Vault Privacy 50 Series - USB flash drive - 512 GB - USB 3.2 Gen 1

Kingston
Kingston IronKey Vault Privacy 50 Series - USB flash drive - encrypted - 128 GB - USB 3.2 Gen 1 - TAA Compliant