Low cost 64gb USB 3.0 flash drive https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00FDUHDA...00FDUHDAC[au|5716553178370339807[b|lifehacker
It's good for small data too. OP only asked for the best, and this is the best you can get. 6Gbps eSATA and it's small enough to fit in your pocket
My friend... There are no best flash drive.. Treat every single flash drive properly... #flashdriveisLife #WorshipTheFlashDrive
Depend on your need. If you need to work after a sh!t ton of physical shock, the HP Shock resistant drive is the best by far, and you can preseve them for quite a while. About small compact as small @ slim as your toe nail( and yep, they flat), HP aslo have one in your option range. The price is varies, but never beyond 7$ or so if storage memory equal or below 32 GB. And both of the variety i told you can fit in perfectly in your daily pill reminder pack( if you have sickness that require hourly/precise timing pill adminitrative every single day or u r f*cked, kind of stuff). Just recomending....
You need to put it in correct slot too If you put it in USB 2.0 then the speed will still be USB 2.0 speed (Just put it in blue USB slot on the PC usually at the back of the tower )
You dont wanna go with transcend drives Transcend drives nand tends to slow down after deletions, you have to reorder the partition to speed it up. Its cost vs efficiency thing. I think youre stuck with sandisk. Just dont buy the ultra2 coz of failures. The top of the line product right now is from intel i believe. But they produce ssd, not sure about usb
You need to identify what specs you need. Speed is largely dependent on how you're connecting the drive to your computer. If you only have USB 2 on your computer, getting a USB 3.1 gen 2 drive is wasteful. Also, if you need the absolute highest speed, you want to look at external SSDs. Many have their own controllers and whatnot, which can speed up reads and writes as well as ensure even drive wear and whatnot. Give us your use-case. How are you using it? Where are you using it? What are you using it for? What capacity do you need? What interface do you need? What form factor do you need? Do you require a minimum read or write speed? Do you have requirements for read and write speed at different transfer sizes or queue-depths? Edit: Also, what's your price range? Like most things, there's no such thing as "the best flash drive". There are lots of "best" flash drives and other external storage solutions, each for a different use and at a different price. To find the best for your use, you need to define what you need and how much you're willing to spend.
I recommend transcend, Im using my transcend for couple of months Its fast, not like other flashdrive, its easy to corrupt.