SanDisk, Microsoft Join to Replace U3

By Nate Mook | Published May 14, 2007, 12:07 PM

Just four months after its big coming out party at CES, U3 -- a platform for running applications from USB thumb drives -- has already been put on the chopping block by parent SanDisk. The company has decided to join Microsoft in creating a new standard.

U3 was first introduced in 2005, backed by a host of supporting software and hardware vendors. Popular applications including AOL's Winamp, Cerulean Studios' Trillian, McAfee Antivirus and Skype among others were offered in U3 versions to spur its adoption.

SanDisk formed U3 as a separate organization with m-systems, and later became its sole owner after it acquired m-systems in November 2006. The company then made a strong push to promote U3 at CES 2007, announcing an ecosystem of 20,000 U3 software developers.

However, notably missing from the list of U3 backers was Microsoft. The lack of support from Redmond ostensibly spelled doom for the fledgling standard, which required software be installed to launch the U3 applications from USB drives.

Under the terms of an agreement to build a "new experience" for USB drives and flash memory cards, Microsoft will create the interface for the platform, which will be compatible with Windows XP and Windows Vista.

Security will also play a more central role this time around, as SanDisk will offer up its TrustedFlash technology, which is designed to prevent the spread of viruses and malware.

A new entity will be created by Microsoft and SanDisk to support the standard, although details are still being worked out. Consumers won't see the new products until late 2008, the companies said.

"We expect this relationship with Microsoft will raise the overall experience for consumers given Microsoft’s unique software expertise, and grow the momentum given the large community of third-party companies capable of utilizing Microsoft’s technologies," said Yoram Cedar, executive vice president of SanDisk's Mobile Business Unit.

Although U3 has been written off, SanDisk and Microsoft say they will offer a migration path for developers to bring their U3 applications to the new platform. But it's not clear how much support will remain for U3 while the companies are working to finalize the currently-unnamed standard.

Comments

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Mandriva already provides a much better choice: Mandriva Flash, a full, bootable Mandriva Linux operating system on a 4GB USB flash drive. Since it's a self-contained, bootable OS, it's completely independent of anything on the host computer. It's fully updatable and expandable with the regular Mandriva Linux packaging system, too. http://store.mandriva.co...nfo.php?products_id=277

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Hell MSFT, why not buy SanDisk? -:)

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Have to agree with the general consensus here... never saw much of an advantage to using U3 when portable apps are already widely available from so many other sources.

For those not familiar with portable apps, a few links:

http://www.portablefreeware.com
http://portableapps.com/
http://www.softpedia.com/get/PORTABLE-SOFTWARE/

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General consensus?? There's 3 total posts and just one guy said that...

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I never really saw much of interest in U3. The launchpad is annoying on XP and the majority of the apps are exclusive to U3. Who needs U3 versions of Foxit and Firefox when there are non-U3 portable versions? U3 was for people that were naive about the alternatives.

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Hopefully, this will alleviate some of that. I wish we had some more specifics on how this will work.

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U3 is a horrible standard. For one thing: it's closed. You can't write something for it unless it's "licensed." That's the largest drawback right there. For another: you don't have the option of cancelling a time-consuming installation every time you insert the dang drive into a new computer. Horrible. Absolutely terrible.

I removed the crap from my USB drive after 1 day of trying it out. I'm so glad I did. Portableapps.com has much better options, and they promote an open standard. I'm actually typing this comment from Firefox Portable. =)

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"Consumers won't see the new products until late 2008, the companies said."

This would lead me to believe that the new platform will only be made for Vista. Microsoft "seems" to want to "terminate" XP in earily 2008.

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Things like that just make protableapps seem that much more appealing.

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