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mauzer_tim
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« on: January 16, 2009, 05:15:02 PM » |
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USB Safely Remove is a USB device manager. It saves time and extends user abilities on active work with flash drives, portable drives, card readers and other gadgets. The program gives a handy safe removal devoid of annoyances of the native Windows tool, displays what programs prevent stopping a device, hides drives of empty card reader slots, allows to return a stopped devices back and has many features for comfortable work with hot-plug devices (USB, SATA, Firewire). Also the program was included into "TOP 100 Best products of 2008 year" by PCWorld magazine. Read more about the program here: http://safelyremove.com/Only for 16th and 17th January we offer the program with 50% discount, for only $10. Discount coupon: JA17PROMOPurchasing page: http://safelyremove.com/order.htmIgor, USB Safely Remove developer
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« Last Edit: January 17, 2009, 01:12:41 PM by mauzer_tim »
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mauzer_tim
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« Reply #2 on: January 17, 2009, 01:11:56 PM » |
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Yes, I'm working for this company  As I mentioned above, I'm a developer of the program.
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Innuendo
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« Reply #4 on: April 04, 2009, 06:09:50 PM » |
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Before you buy this program please realize that not only does it not work with Windows 7, but some (most?) of the program's functionality is in Windows 7 out of the box.
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Dirhael
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« Reply #5 on: April 12, 2009, 05:33:58 PM » |
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Before you buy this program please realize that not only does it not work with Windows 7, but some (most?) of the program's functionality is in Windows 7 out of the box.
Yes it does (work with Windows 7), I've been using it (the 4.1 beta) in build 7000, 7057 & 7068 without problems.
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Registered nurse by day, hobby programmer by night.
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Innuendo
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« Reply #6 on: April 14, 2009, 10:27:24 AM » |
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Thanks for the update, Dirhael. My experience was with an older version.
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IL1keT0Donate
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« Reply #7 on: November 02, 2009, 01:14:32 AM » |
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If you missed previous free or discounted deals, then ...
According to Bits Du Jour ...
The next time you'll receive a 40% discount on USB Safely Remove
will be the 7th December 2009
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biox
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« Reply #8 on: November 07, 2009, 05:58:56 AM » |
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I've downloaded the trial version (no probs on Win 7 so far), should last me until the discount. Even if not it has become a must have over the course of just 36 hours. 
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« Last Edit: November 08, 2009, 01:51:32 AM by biox »
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rjbull
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« Reply #9 on: June 06, 2010, 12:05:21 PM » |
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USB Safely Remove will be featured on Bits du Jour again on Wednesday 9 June, 2010 : Deal Price: $12.00 List Price: $20.00 You Save: 40%
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Midnight Rambler
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« Reply #10 on: August 14, 2010, 05:38:34 AM » |
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USB Disk Ejector works fine too and is freeware. Have been using it on my XP and Vista boxes without a hitch.
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Compaq Presario 5716 (98), Dell Dimension 4700 (XP), Lenovo ThinkPad R61i (Vista).
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rjbull
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« Reply #11 on: August 15, 2010, 10:46:46 AM » |
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USB Safely Remove does more than just eject. Samples: - Display surprise removal USB devices
- On attempt to stop a whole card reader:
- Ask a question
- Always disconnect
- Never disconnect (only allow ejection of memory cards)
- Drive letter management —
- Hide drive letters when there are no media inserted (System setting)
This option is very useful when you have a card reader. Usually card readers create several extra empty drives in the system. After this option is enabled you will only see drives of those slots where memory cards are inserted into. - Prohibit assigning the following drive letters to hot-plug devices
It will prevent Windows from assigning the specified drive letters to hot-plug devices (flash drives, USB drives). It is useful if you have nelwork drives - Global Autorun
Here you can assign programs to launch on connection or disconnection of all devices visible by the program
The feature I like most is the ability to permanently assign a drive letter to a USB device. E.g., one USB stick always appears as F:, another as G:, the card reader is always H:, and my WD Passport external HD is always I:, whether or not they are present at boot time and in whatever order they are added. If you want even more features, the same firm make Zentimo. Key features: - Drive Letter Management
The program can hide drive letters of unused card reader slots, tie a drive letter to a specific device and many more... - Portable App Quick Launcher
Lets you launch any application located on your external drive with a click - Powerful Autorun
Can automatically mount\dismount your TrueCrypt drive, a file manager, check flash for viruses or anything else on device connection\disconnection - Real Safe Device Removal
Lets you stop your device, displays locking processes or even activate a stopped device back. - Honest Drive Speed Test
You can see your drive actual read\write speed
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« Last Edit: August 16, 2010, 09:06:00 AM by rjbull »
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rjbull
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« Reply #13 on: August 15, 2010, 11:12:58 AM » |
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Thanks, tomos! I overlooked that one 
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superboyac
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« Reply #14 on: August 15, 2010, 03:20:53 PM » |
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The feature I like most is the ability to permanently assign a drive letter to a USB device. E.g., one USB stick always appears as F:, another as G:, the card reader is always H:, and my WD Passport external HD is always I:, whether or not they are present at boot time and in whatever order they are added.
Yes! Me too! I love that feature more so than anything else. The software is worth the money just for that alone, even if it didn't do any of the start/stop stuff. It's a well made program, it really is. It does what it says and is supposed to do, it does it really well, the design is simple yet elegant, the user experience is great. I love stuff like that.
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Midnight Rambler
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« Reply #15 on: August 16, 2010, 05:34:56 AM » |
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The feature I like most is the ability to permanently assign a drive letter to a USB device.
USBDLM V4.5.2 is another freeware alternative for drive letter assignment that's solved my XP machine's issue. Runs as a service at start up. Appears to be not compatible with Vista or Win7 but those OS's are supposed to not be afflicted anyway. Seems like there's always a decent freeware alternative for non-crucial system issues. For those more important - like backup and imaging, no shortcuts.
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« Last Edit: August 16, 2010, 05:37:34 AM by Midnight Rambler »
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Compaq Presario 5716 (98), Dell Dimension 4700 (XP), Lenovo ThinkPad R61i (Vista).
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Darwin
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« Reply #16 on: August 16, 2010, 08:02:54 AM » |
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I'm using UWBDLM under Win 7 64-bit (and before that Vista 64-bit and before that Vista 32-bit) with no problems whatsoever.
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"Some people have a way with words, other people,... oh... have not way" - Steve Martin
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superboyac
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« Reply #17 on: August 16, 2010, 08:48:12 AM » |
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The feature I like most is the ability to permanently assign a drive letter to a USB device.
USBDLM V4.5.2 is another freeware alternative for drive letter assignment that's solved my XP machine's issue. Runs as a service at start up. Appears to be not compatible with Vista or Win7 but those OS's are supposed to not be afflicted anyway. Seems like there's always a decent freeware alternative for non-crucial system issues. For those more important - like backup and imaging, no shortcuts. It's also a command line tool. I have no problem with it, but I'd much prefer a nice interface with buttons and stuff. I think I came across USBDLM a while back and it worked as advertised. I didn't have any problems with it (XP system).
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rjbull
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« Reply #18 on: August 16, 2010, 09:10:55 AM » |
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Only free for personal use, just checked.
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tomos
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« Reply #19 on: September 04, 2011, 12:07:26 PM » |
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USB Safely Remove @ 50% off (= $10) I'm tagging it on here because officially it ended yesterday but still working as of 5 minutes ago! http://safelyremove.com/order.htm?50poff
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Ath
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« Reply #20 on: September 29, 2011, 07:21:59 AM » |
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Received an e-mail today: We have a special promo this month for you. Purchase any of our programs until September 30th and save 50%! Read more about this offer on our web-site: http://safelyremove.com/limitedOffer.htm?emLess than 48 hours left, hurry before it's too late! -- Kind regards, USB Safely Remove & Zentimo development team, http://crystalrich.comLike Tomos, tagged here because it's the same offer.
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Ath
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« Reply #21 on: October 29, 2011, 06:18:18 AM » |
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And again a special offer from Crystal Rich: Some time ago you requested a free license for USB Safely Remove. If you like the program we are glad to offer you a unique opportunity to purchase the license for the latest version at 50% off for only $9.95 USD (price includes one year upgrades). The version 4.7 has many new features you may benefit from: a completely reworked stylish user interface that adds skins, lets you stop all devices at once, can power off drives in Vista and Win 7, has better safe removal tool and many other improvements that make your work with USB and SATA devices even more comfortable. Grab the deal here: http://safelyremove.com/order.htm?50poffHurry, the offer is valid only until November 2nd! -- Kind regards, USB Safely Remove development team, http://crystalrich.comAnd because it's still the same deal, added to this thread again.
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J-Mac
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« Reply #22 on: October 30, 2011, 11:14:54 AM » |
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I got USB Safely Remove during the free giveaway in August. The version offered, 4.7, is frozen, meaning I cannot get any updates without upgrading. That's OK - perfectly acceptable since the giveaway was surely meant to attract interested people who would hopefully become permanent customers. However after downloading and installing the giveaway version I received a flurry of emails trying to get me to upgrade immediately. When I say "flurry" it was more like a blizzard! Maybe a dozen emails in the first three days. It died down quite a bit after that to a more acceptable level of maybe three a week, then the emails stopped altogether.
I do understand that they gave away the program in order to draw paying customers but I would think that people need a little time to decide whether or not they really like the software before barraging them with solicitations. IDK, maybe I have it all wrong and the first few days are critical from a marketing standpoint. It just seemed like overkill too soon to me.
As it stands I no longer have this program start with Windows. I was running it on Windows 7 and it went a little bonkers on me a few times. Anytime I clicked on the little "Up" arrow that opens the system tray's hidden icons I would get one or more USB Safely Remove windows open telling me it was safe to remove, well, just about every USB device I had connected! I admit I didn't take the time to troubleshoot it because I don’t connect and disconnect devices to my PC that often so it was easier to just disable the auto-start and use the old-fashioned Windows utility for safely removing USB devices.
I'm surprised because so many DC members praised this program. Has anyone else seen similar issues with USB Safely Remove? Any thoughts on what kind of conflict could be behind the weird behavior I saw?
Thanks!
Jim
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J-Mac
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Ath
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« Reply #23 on: October 30, 2011, 02:43:29 PM » |
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I'm surprised because so many DC members praised this program.
I'm one of them, I'm very pleased with how easy it integrates with Windows 7 (x64) and how painless it makes the mounting and dismounting of USB aparatus that need to be dismounted. You must have something hosed on your system, either a weird (unsupported doesn't seem appropriate) or defective USB controller or some drivers acting up in your Windows install. Btw, I got that same 4.7 from the august giveaway, but only received like 2 or 3 offers to "Upgrade Now" (per account that I got it for  ) with the above post being the last one.
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cyberdiva
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« Reply #24 on: October 30, 2011, 02:46:22 PM » |
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I was running it on Windows 7 and it went a little bonkers on me a few times. Anytime I clicked on the little "Up" arrow that opens the system tray's hidden icons I would get one or more USB Safely Remove windows open telling me it was safe to remove, well, just about every USB device I had connected!
Hi, Jim. I had a slightly different but possibly related experience with USB Safely Remove (version 4.7.1.1153). Several times, when I was clicking on a different program in my system tray, USB Safely Remove would pop up to tell me that there were "no visible connected devices." I thought that was strange, since I hadn't clicked on the USBSR icon. I finally realized that each time, I had been clicking on the icon right next to USBSR, and instead of hitting the icon directly, I missed and was actually clicking on the space between the other program and USBSR. That was enough to trigger the popup. If you've got the USBSR icon sitting right next to the little "up" arrows leading to the hidden icons, it may be that you didn't hit the arrows directly but clicked slightly to the right, and that would be enough to trigger the USBSR popup. I think I've even seen this happen when I've intended to click on the ClipMate icon, which isn't all that near USBSR. Occasionally, if I don't hit the ClipMate icon cleanly, USBSR has popped up. I really don't understand that, since the icons are not next to each other. It's also the case that this behavior with ClipMate and USBSR is not consistent or even frequent, but it has happened several times.
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