WD ships first 2 TB Portable Hard Drive

VARINDIA- INDIA'S FRONTLINE IT MAGAZINE

WD ships first 2 TB Portable Hard Drive

Western Digital has unveiled the next generation of its top-selling My Passport line of portable hard drives, the first-ever 2 TB capacity in a portable drive. Available in five popular colors: white, black, silver, blue, and red, with a range of capacities beginning from 500 GB, the new sleeker My Passport portable drives offer digital consumers an appealing array of storage options that reflect their personal style. Additionally, the new My Passport drives offer WD SmartWare automatic backup software and WD Security for password protection and hardware encryption.

The new My Passport external drives feature ultra-fast USB 3.0 connectivity; USB 2.0 compatibility; continuous, automatic backup software; and password protection with hardware encryption. The included software offers the flexibility to customize the drive to a user's storage preferences: installing all features, just the components needed, or using the drive without the software. The new 2 TB model offers massive capacity in an amazing pocket-sized enclosure, affording plenty of secure storage for all of one's photos, video, music and other important files.

Khalid Wani, Sales Director - Branded Business for India, Middle East and Africa, WD said, "More than money, jewelry and other valuables, the item most missed if ever lost or stolen is ones computer - and everything on it - so our goal in launching the next-generation of the popular My Passport drives is to encourage more consumers to protect their data before something happens. The new My Passport makes backing up and preserving one's digital life easier, reliable and more secure than ever - it's the perfect blend of monstrous capacity, reliability and user-friendly technology in a sleek form factor, now in five colors."


For More Details See

www.varindia.com

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

N Chandrasekaran appointed chairman of Tata Sons

Visa buys NFT based CryptoPunk and paid $150,000 in Etherium

Prizm Payment Services changes its name to Hitachi Payment Services