Samsung Flash F30 ^new^ [NEW]

Samsung occasionally partnered with U3, a platform that allowed portable applications (like Firefox or Skype) to run directly from the USB drive. This feature was divisive—some loved it, while others found the virtual CD-ROM partition annoying and removed it using third-party tools.

For those who don't remember, this was the camcorder to have around 2006/2007. It was one of the first mainstream flash memory camcorders—meaning no MiniDV tapes to rewind! It had a 34x zoom lens that could basically see the moon and a rotating LCD screen that made filming yourself look "natural" (before we called it vlogging). samsung flash f30

A 100MB file (common for a PowerPoint deck or a few MP3s) would take approximately 10–15 seconds to copy onto the drive. A full 700MB movie file would take 1.5 to 2 minutes to write. Samsung occasionally partnered with U3, a platform that

It recorded our first concerts, skateboard fails, and high school graduation speeches. It was chunky, awkward, and absolutely perfect. It was one of the first mainstream flash

In today’s era of terabytes in the cloud and SSDs smaller than a postage stamp, the F30 is a relic. But for anyone who carried one on a keychain, filled it with music for a road trip, or used it to print a term paper five minutes before class, it represents a tangible link to a more physical era of computing.