The 64GB Cruzer Blade™ USB Flash Drive may look small, but it has all the space you need to store and share tunes, pictures and home videos – or your presentations and spreadsheets – whenever you want. Despite storing 64GB in a compact and contoured design, the Cruzer Blade USB Flash Drive is barely half the size of most USB Flash Drives. It makes sure that your private files stay protected, with the password protection and encryption1 offered by SanDisk SecureAccess™ software.
Features and benefits
Compact, light design makes it easy to carry round
The easiest way to share, store and protect your music, pictures, videos and work
So simple to use, you can be up and running in seconds
SanDisk SecureAccess software protects private files with a personal password and automatic 128-bit AES encryption1
It couldn’t be easier to use: simply drag and drop files into a private folder or "vault" and they’re safe
3 comments
darkg
11 Oct 15#3
thanks op ordered
50pEachwayJay
11 Oct 15#2
Thanks op. Ordered one for back-up for photos and videos.
pavel76
9 Oct 15#1
Much faster - 90mb/s read and 30mb write Grixx £12.49 at 7dayshop
Opening post
ull product description
The 64GB Cruzer Blade™ USB Flash Drive may look small, but it has all the space you need to store and share tunes, pictures and home videos – or your presentations and spreadsheets – whenever you want. Despite storing 64GB in a compact and contoured design, the Cruzer Blade USB Flash Drive is barely half the size of most USB Flash Drives. It makes sure that your private files stay protected, with the password protection and encryption1 offered by SanDisk SecureAccess™ software.
Features and benefits
Compact, light design makes it easy to carry round
The easiest way to share, store and protect your music, pictures, videos and work
So simple to use, you can be up and running in seconds
SanDisk SecureAccess software protects private files with a personal password and automatic 128-bit AES encryption1
It couldn’t be easier to use: simply drag and drop files into a private folder or "vault" and they’re safe
3 comments