Which chip are they using? The highest capacity NAND memory on Samsung's website appears to be 256Gbit. Example part number: K9PFGD8U5M (most of the detail is hidden behind an NDA)<p>I doubt they can stack 32 of these chips into the same thumb drive, so what else is out there?
My reaction to this was. Oh, I've seen pocket knives with thumbdrives. Wait does that say 1TB? They can fit 1TB in a tumbdrive???<p>How long has this been possible?
Won't (I hope) be long 'til someone offers the 1TB "thumbdrive"* without the baggage (already carry a Benchmade, don't need another in-pocket toybox). Esp. nice having the writable display.<p>* - am amazed that nobody has yet come up with a suitable, consistent, catchy, universally-accepted name for "tiny solid-state data storage device with ubiquitous interface". Anything with "drive" in the name is an anachronism.
One thing that appears to be glossed over is how easy this device makes hijacking data from organizations. High-speed, tons of storage, and inconspicuous.<p>This underscores the importance of having proper access controls and alerts in place to identify anomalous data access.