Yes, it works very well on our surface PRO, so should work on an RT. Transfer speed will be affected by what USB type (1.1,2.0,3.0) it is connected to for operation.
Not sure how you will be sorry later, especially if f you pick this Cruzer up on sale. 128gb of storage is the key here - particularly if you have smallish file to transport. I think it's a safe purchase.
I have never had a problem with these drives. I've only bought larger sizes for more space. They've served what I've needed. Older ones are still working. So, I will continue to purchase from this manufacturer.
I only use the drives to save files in readable formats: such as adobe (pdf), excel (xlsx), word (docx), movie files like mp4. Then just open the files with software that works with those file types. It will work in any internet cafe....
If you took HD photos of 2mb per photo which is really detailed, you could 'theoetically' get 64K photos. But the actual number would be somewhat less.
I'm not sure how many photos this can hold because I don't know the resolution that you use. My photos are generally 1920x1080 and this hold HUNDREDS (Thousands?).
I just had a client load 50 videos onto it so I could take them home to work on them.
I'm not 100 percent certain. I was specifically looking for the 128 gb in which I was able to find with SanDisk. A Best Buy representative could possibly tell you for certain.
That depends on your TV. Having a USB port doesn't automatically mean the TV will read and display video. Pictures more so. I have a Vizio and it only shows the photos. Smart TV's or TV's designed to read video from a flash drive are the best options when it comes to that.
You will need to format this drive most likely but yes. I’ve used flash drives on my Mac and pc interchangeably, but have to format them often in order for it to be comparable.
,mp3 files and other music files typically compress 16-bit stereo 44.1 KHz sampled CD content to approximately 1-2 megabytes per minute of audio depending on the compression method used (10 to 20% of the original uncompressed size on a CD). 2000 .mp3 song files with an average length of 4 minutes using a 2 megabytes per minute compression method would use a maximum of about 16 GB of storage space.
As long as they are mp3 format, yes. If you use lossless or any of the larger file sizes, then it depends on the compression. Even with a 100MB lossless file, you can still get 1,280 songs on this drive.