![]() Linux: Right click on the file, and select "Open with" and choose another program. Then choose another program and check the "Always Open With" box. Mac: Right click (or Ctrl-click) the CEID file, then click "Open with" > "Other.". Now select another program and check the box "Always use this app to open *.CEID files". Windows: Right click on any CEID file and then click "Open with" > "Choose another app". Associate the CEID file extension with the correct application.Views expressed in Switched On are his own. Ross Rubin is executive director of industry analysis for consumer technology at market research and analysis firm The NPD Group. It's many connection options certainly help it live up to the "flex" part of its name, but will the gaggle of proprietary cables and incompatible docks make it a "go" or slow? The next Switched On will delve deeper into the pros and cons of GoFlex, and discuss the scenarios for which it might be most useful. The '80s and '90s saw several cartridge-based systems with escalating capacities and varying levels of success, mostly from SyQuest and Iomega, which spun out Bernoulli, Zip, Jaz, tiny PocketetZip, nee Cliq, disks that were small enough to fit in a portable MP3 player called HipZip, and its most recent format launched in 2004, REV.Ĭompared to the enclosures those systems required, GoFlex is relatively lightweight. GoFlex is far from the first attempt to use external hard disks as removeable media. Both products also include USB ports, though, so Seagate isn't completely locking out other drives with either one. And if you haven't bought enough proprietary adapters yet, Seagate will sell one for WiFi-enabling the GoFlex TV, too. Finally, Seagate is upgrading its HDMI-bearing FreeAgent Theater+ digital media playback and streaming product to become GoFlex TV, which will enable customers to fully insert a GoFlex drive inside the enclosure, an homage to the front-loading VCR. ![]() One thoughtful touch: GoFlex Net, like other GoFlex docks, has a simple LED display to indicate how full the docked drives are. in addition to all the capabilities of the PogoPlug, new version enables one to dock two GoFlex drives and even have one automatically back up to the other as they back up PCs on the network. ![]() It's additionally upgrading its PogoPlug-based DockStar media serving and remote access product (a 2009 Switchie award winner) to the GoFlex Net. Similar options will also be available for Seagate's "desktop" 3.5-inch platter-based desktop drives (GoFlex Desk), but the GoFlex adapters for these drives have a different shape and are incompatible with the notebook drives, a move that will likely frustrate users.īut Seagate is going beyond directly attached storage peripherals with GoFlex. GoFlex "notebook" external 2.5-inch platter-based drives (the basis of the company's previous FreeAgent Go line, which will remain an entry-level option) will come with a USB connector cable by default, but Seagate will also offer adapters for FireWire, eSATA and USB 3.0, along with a kit that includes an ExpressCard option. GoFlex is the company's new connector that forms a bridge between the back of an external drive and a variety of new Seagate cables, docks and enclosures. Seagate, though, is betting big that a new series of breakaway connectors will bring the old usage model of floppy drives into the 21st Century and accommodate complete media libraries, as well as include a few new twists that take into account such modern tasks as media streaming, remote access and networked entertainment. Most internal drives use SATA connectors and most external drives connect via USB there hasn't seemed to be much frustration with this other than the speed of USB 2.0, which is showing its age and is being superseded by the backward-compatible USB 3.0. Consumer hard disk connectors have been pretty stable for the past few years.
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