- VoIP & Phone Systems
VoIP for Small Business: Getting Started Guide
18 Mar, 2026







£22.54 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
For £18.90 ex-VAT, a 128GB Kingston DataTraveler is the kind of “just works” storage you buy when you need reliability more than flash. These drives are typically solid for everyday file transfers—offering sensible read/write speeds for copying documents, installers, and presentations between PCs in an office or for handing files to clients. Kingston’s track record with USB sticks is also decent, so you’re not usually rolling the dice on build quality or “mystery corruption” after a few months.
That said, I wouldn’t buy this if you’re expecting it to behave like a high-speed SSD replacement or if you’ll be doing lots of big video transfers all day long. USB sticks also have a shorter life expectancy than internal storage, so they’re better suited to intermittent use, backups of smaller data sets, or sneaker-net installs—not heavy write workloads. If you need a dependable, everyday 128GB stick for staff, contractors, or occasional media/tool distribution, it’s a good value pick. If you tell me your typical file sizes and how often the drive will be written to, I can sanity-check whether this is the right class of product or you’d be better off with something pricier but more appropriate.

Kingston
Kingston DataTraveler Exodia S - USB flash drive - 512 GB - USB 3.2 Gen 1

Kingston
Kingston IronKey Vault Privacy 50 Series - USB flash drive - 512 GB - USB 3.2 Gen 1

Kingston
Kingston IronKey D500S - USB flash drive - encrypted - FIPS 140-3 Level 3 - 16 GB - USB 3.2 Gen 1 - TAA Compliant

Kingston
Kingston DataTraveler SE9 G3 - USB flash drive - 256 GB - USB 3.2 Gen 1 - gold