Testing the LaCie Rugged Safe
I unboxed the
drive and all necessary cables were included. The Rugged Safe can get power either
over USB or FireWire. There is a Quick Install
Guide printed in a booklet that got me up and running in minutes. Software
utilities and setup are on included on the CD-ROM, but I didn't need those
because a partition of the drive itself has the same software on it.
On my Windows
Vista Ultimate 64 workstation I followed the quick-start guide and connected
the drive physically via IEEE 1394 FireWire. Windows found it and offered to
format it for me; however, I fortunately realized that Windows wanted to format
the drive that mounts automatically with the installation applications in it,
so I canceled. Instead I mounted the drive and explored it to find the LaCie
Safe Manager referred to in the Quick Install guide. I installed it, which
involved creating the first user (there can be up to 10) and enrolling my
fingerprints, and then had to restart.
After I restarted, I swiped my finger on the drive and Windows asked me to format it. I went with NTFS (NT File System) for performance reasons. After the drive was formatted, all I had to do was connect it, watch the red light come on at the top of the unit, then swipe my finger. The light turns green and the volume gets mounted as removable media, with 463 beautiful gigabytes of encrypted data storage.
As I mentioned
above, one drawback to the Rugged Safe is that it is an end-user-managed,
rather than centrally managed, asset. The Safe Manager software can manage up
to 10 users and their access to the hard drive. This is really more of a
single-user solution-and it's a great, secure addition to the corporate
traveler's technology kit.
Performance
was very good. I used ATTO Disk Benchmark and got a maximum of 26.5MB per
second write and 29.7MB per second read for the Rugged Safe, compared with
another external FireWire drive with 13.4MB per second write and 22.0MB per
second read. Also, copying a directory containing 13.7GB of files to the Rugged
Safe took 14 minutes and 39 seconds (copying back took 9 minutes and 36
seconds), compared with 17 minutes and 20 seconds there and 12 minutes and 7
seconds back for the other drive.
After I restarted, I swiped my finger on the drive and Windows asked me to format it. I went with NTFS (NT File System) for performance reasons. After the drive was formatted, all I had to do was connect it, watch the red light come on at the top of the unit, then swipe my finger. The light turns green and the volume gets mounted as removable media, with 463 beautiful gigabytes of encrypted data storage.


Matthew D. Sarrel, CISSP, is a network security,product development, and technical marketingconsultant based in New York City. He is also a gamereviewer and technical writer. To read his opinions on games please browse 






