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Kano SureFIRE800

 & Bill Machrone Bill_Machrone@ziffdavis.com

Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology.

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 - Kano SureFIRE800
4.0 Excellent

Pros & Cons

Kano SureFIRE800 Specs

Ports: Firewire 400
Ports: Firewire 800
Ports: USB
Ports: USB 2.0
Rotation Speed: 5400 rpm
Storage Capacity (as Tested): 80 GB
Type: External

Company:
Kano Technologies Corp., www.kanotechnologies.com
Price:
$249 list.
Spec Data:
80GB; 5,400 rpm; USB 1.1, 2.0, FireWire 400, 800; 5.3 x 3.3 x 0.8 inches, 10 ounces

Pros:
Fast performance; lots of storage space; has USB 2.0, FireWire 400, FireWire 800; includes backup software.
Cons:
Provided backup software is powerful but complex.
Bottom Line:
A very fast and flexible drive with a full spectrum of interface options. The provided backup software, however, is unnecessarily complex and uses a proprietary format.

Review
At 80GB, the SureFIRE800 is the storage heavyweight among the portable drives... click here for

At 80GB, the SureFIRE800 is the storage heavyweight among the portable drives. Its 10-ounce travel weight also makes it the heaviest of the drives you'd consider for on-the-road use.

Although it's no larger than the CODi drive (and much less expensive), the SureFIRE800 has twice the storage capacity. Its back panel is replete with ports, including USB 2.0, FireWire 400, and FireWire 800 ports. Both of the FireWire sockets are full-size, which may be convenient, but the supplied cables are enormous compared with the USB cable; they don't lend themselves to portability. The unit measures 5.3 by 3.3 by 0.8 inches.

The SureFIRE800 comes with an external power supply, a slender, space-saving "wall wart." The external adapter is required for USB operation, but it's not necessary for FireWire operation when you use the full six-wire (or nine-wire for FireWire 800) cable. Also included is Dantz's Retrospect Express 6.5 backup software. The documentation for Retrospect Express is on the CD and is generic rather than tailored to the SureFIRE800, so you have to wade through some extraneous information about the networked and professional versions.

Although Retrospect Express is highly capable, it can be unnecessarily complicated for simple personal-storage users. The software backs up files to a proprietary format that can't be browsed with normal file utilities and applications. Disaster recovery of a crashed and unbootable system is a multistep process involving burning a CD. Despite the software's wizards and a nicely structured menu system, you actually have to read the Retrospect manual to use the program effectively. That's not necessarily a bad thing, but it's probably more than most users want to do.

The SureFIRE800 performed well, cranking out 154 megabits per second on our large directory test and 73 Mbps on large video files. It was marginally faster on FireWire 400, and with FireWire 800 leapt up to 200 Mbps on the multimedia test.

Among portable disk-based drives, the Kano SureFIRE800 stands out on a cost-per-gigabyte basis. Its performance, especially with the FireWire 800 connection, makes it a good investment for those who work with large multimedia files. That said, we would prefer a less complex backup software solution.

Final Thoughts

 - Kano SureFIRE800

Kano SureFIRE800

4.0 Excellent

About Our Expert

Bill Machrone

Bill Machrone

Bill_Machrone@ziffdavis.com

Bill Machrone is vice president of technology at Ziff Davis Publishing and editorial director of the Interactive Media and Development Group. He joined Ziff Davis in May 1983 as technical editor of PC Magazine, became editor-in-chief in September of that year, and held that position for the next eight years, while adding the titles of publisher and publishing director. During his tenure, Machrone created the tough, labs-based comparison reviews that propelled PC Magazine to the forefront of the industry and made it the seventh-largest magazine in the United States. He pioneered numerous other innovations that have become standards in computer journalism, such as Service and Reliability Surveys, free utility software, benchmark tests, Suitability to Task ratings, and price/performance charts. Machrone also founded PC Magazine Labs and created the online service PC MagNet, which later expanded into ZDNet. In 1991, when Machrone was appointed vice president of technology, he founded ZD Labs in Foster City, California. He also worked on the launch team for Corporate Computing magazine, was the founding editor of Yahoo! Internet Life, and is working on several other development projects in conventional publishing and electronic media. Machrone has been a columnist for PC Magazine since 1983 and became a columnist for PC Week in 1993.

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