It might just be me but… I have noticed that as flash drives have gotten cheaper the past couple of years the quality has really gone down, they have become very unreliable. Sometimes they will read in a cdj sometimes not. Might look good on the mac at home, but plug it into the same mac 30mins later at the club, and now i have to restart my laptop to get the file system to mount. Not good! I always fresh format my drives when i buy them, to fat32 so they will read in cdjs, and i have been using sandisk drives, but im always bringing my cds just in case. Anyone else having this problem??
I might have been pretty lucky but I did have a lot of problems with flashdrives in college. Do you safely eject them? Macs tend to screw everything up when you don’t do this. But frankly, I’ve had the same Sandisk since I finished college 2 years ago and never had a problem with it since I started doing this. It’s also good once in a while to format your key just because a lot of hidden files can fill your flashdrive up and create issues when you plug it into a new computer. Hope that kind of helps…
I’ve had an SD card get its database corrupted once, but that was easily fixed just by refreshing through Rekordbox.
There are tons of cheap rubbish USB sticks out there - even from SanDisk - so you should really check the reviews and actual recorded transfer rates before you buy any flash media.
Truth being that Windows is widely praised for it’s flash-drive-removing abilities? It’s Microsoft’s fault we’re stuck using FAT32 in the 1st place. I actually find OSX better at preparing a drive to be ejected, whereas Windows will keep complaining about the drive still being in use.
Either way it’s a minor issue and what OS he’s using is not likely to be causing the drive read errors. Faulty flash drives and buggy Rekordbox software are much more likely.
Yep Flash memory is getting cheaper.. Less of a product? Probably not since the same modules for the most part are used in 1TB Solid State Drives Like others said I would check the hardware you are connecting to.
And yep.. its Microsofts fault no one else got off their ass to develop a standard that has worked flawlessly for over 2 decades.