Lexar JumpDrive Secure II USB Flash Drive - Mac & PC Support
by Anand Lal Shimpi on October 21, 2005 1:59 AM EST- Posted in
- Memory
Using Encrypted Vaults
We created an encrypted vault using Lexar's new software. The process was quite simple:
Once you've provided a password for the vault, the utility will begin the creation of the vault. This process does take a little while, but no more than a matter of a couple of minutes on our test machines.
With the vault created and mounted, it was ready to use.
Once created, you can use Lexar's Dashboard to mount and unmount an encrypted vault, but you cannot delete it using the utility. Instead, to delete it, you have to find the actual volume file (a .lxv file) and delete that manually.
We found and deleted the AnandTech.lxv file, but had mixed results under Windows and OS X.
Interestingly enough, performance went up when looking at the 0.5KB and 32KB read tests, but for the most part, the encrypted vault is noticeably slower than accessing the public, unencrypted drive.
Read performance is quite respectable when accessing the encrypted vault, generally only 1 - 3MB/s slower than normal, but write speed is where you truly lose a lot of performance when enabling Lexar's 256-bit encryption. While a 256KB file can be written at a rate of 7.9MB/s on an unencrypted volume, writing the same size of file to an encrypted vault drops performance down to less than 2MB/s.
Lexar's new Dashboard also lets you encrypt individual files anywhere on your PC, as well as shred files so that they cannot be recovered through normal means of recovery after being deleted.
We created an encrypted vault using Lexar's new software. The process was quite simple:
Creating an Encrypted Vault under Windows XP
Creating an Encrypted Vault under OS X
The same dialog box under Windows
Once you've provided a password for the vault, the utility will begin the creation of the vault. This process does take a little while, but no more than a matter of a couple of minutes on our test machines.
With the vault created and mounted, it was ready to use.
Once created, you can use Lexar's Dashboard to mount and unmount an encrypted vault, but you cannot delete it using the utility. Instead, to delete it, you have to find the actual volume file (a .lxv file) and delete that manually.
We found and deleted the AnandTech.lxv file, but had mixed results under Windows and OS X.
The vault that we just created
Deleting a vault results in this message being displayed under Windows XP.
0.5KB | 32KB | 256KB | 2048KB | 65536KB | ||||||
Read | Write | Read | Write | Read | Write | Read | Write | Read | Write | |
Secure | 0.9 | 5 | 9078 | 287 | 10112 | 1852 | 10103 | 4403 | 9830 | 6554 |
Public | 0.4 | 58 | 8779 | 3147 | 11964 | 7930 | 12425 | 9216 | 12015 | 9830 |
Interestingly enough, performance went up when looking at the 0.5KB and 32KB read tests, but for the most part, the encrypted vault is noticeably slower than accessing the public, unencrypted drive.
Read performance is quite respectable when accessing the encrypted vault, generally only 1 - 3MB/s slower than normal, but write speed is where you truly lose a lot of performance when enabling Lexar's 256-bit encryption. While a 256KB file can be written at a rate of 7.9MB/s on an unencrypted volume, writing the same size of file to an encrypted vault drops performance down to less than 2MB/s.
Lexar's new Dashboard also lets you encrypt individual files anywhere on your PC, as well as shred files so that they cannot be recovered through normal means of recovery after being deleted.
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gsellis - Friday, October 21, 2005 - link
Looks like they fixed it. The last model was too wide to fit into some USB ports because of the surrounding hardware.mosquiton - Friday, October 21, 2005 - link
The thing looks very familiar...tvittetoe - Wednesday, October 19, 2022 - link
I am hoping I can replace an older Lexar file: SecureII.exe. I still have the older jumpdrive with SecureII.exe on it, but it won't decrypt a couple of older lxv files I have.