At other cybercafes, I don't have this problem. Just at some.
Can this damage my flash drive? What is wrong with the computer that
causes it to do this?
So far my drive is still working after suffering a number of these
incidents. Also, I have continued using the drive when it was plugged
into one of these rogue USB ports, and it still functioned.
Thanks for any insight.
I am not knowledgeable enough to know if a static charge will damage
your flash drive, but I'll bet it's not doing the drive any great favors.
---
Ted Zieglar
"Backup is a computer user's best friend."
> My guess is static electricity. Perhaps the cyber cafes that shock you
> have thick carpets, or something else that builds up a static charge on
> your body. Ground yourself before you handle your flash drive...which
> may give you a small shock just the same but at least your flash drive
> won't take the hit.
>
> I am not knowledgeable enough to know if a static charge will damage
> your flash drive, but I'll bet it's not doing the drive any great favors.
> Arvo wrote:
>> I occasionally plug my USB flash drive into a computer at a cybercafe,
>> and notice that the metal parts of the flash drive give me a shock (a
>> small, low voltage shock but a shock nevertheless.)
>>
>> At other cybercafes, I don't have this problem. Just at some.
>>
>> Can this damage my flash drive? What is wrong with the computer that
>> causes it to do this?
>>
>> So far my drive is still working after suffering a number of these
>> incidents. Also, I have continued using the drive when it was plugged
>> into one of these rogue USB ports, and it still functioned.
The OP has been lucky. The slight static shock that we humans feel is enough
to destroy computer components. If the drive doesn't produce shocks
anywhere else, then you know the issue is being caused by static
electricity at the cyber cafe(s). As Ted Zieglar said, maybe the cafe has
thick carpet. If the shock happens elsewhere, replace the usb key because
sooner or later it's going to fail.
Malke
--
MS-MVP Windows Shell/User
Elephant Boy Computers
www.elephantboycomputers.com
"Don't Panic"
---
Ted Zieglar
"Backup is a computer user's best friend."
The electrical wiring for this computer or the cybercafe seems to be at
fault here.
--
Sylvain Lafontaine, ing.
MVP - Technologies Virtual-PC
E-mail: http://cerbermail.com/?QugbLEWINF
"Arvo" <ar...@goggo.com.au> wrote in message
news:1154531757.6...@m73g2000cwd.googlegroups.com...
That's very likely the problem. Without testing, I'd guess their ground is
reversed with either the hot or neutral, either the cord supplying the PC or
the building wiring itself.
Two things...First, someone could die in this cafe if their body makes a
good connection to a real ground somewhere. This is a serious problem.
Two, don't go there anymore. If you must, *make sure* you don't touch any
grounds while touching the computer, and regardless what you do make sure
the person in charge of the place is aware of this problem.
-John O
JS
"Arvo" <ar...@goggo.com.au> wrote in message
news:1154531757.6...@m73g2000cwd.googlegroups.com...
Anyway, touch the computer before inserting any device
should equalize charge potential before it spikes the
device.
"Malke" <notr...@invalid.com> wrote in message
news:OZ8jOYkt...@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...
Static discharge is a different beast, it's harmless to humans. A hot
chassis is a potential killer.
-John O
>Two, don't go there anymore. If you must, *make sure* you don't touch any
>grounds while touching the computer, and regardless what you do make sure
>the person in charge of the place is aware of this problem.
Playing with hot wires is a matter of life and death. I seriously
doubt that using the cafe is a matter of life and death. Don't go
there until it's fixed, period.
Then you've got a major electrical problem in the cafe. I wouldn't
touch anything metallic there--you're probably dealing with line
voltage. Dry hands and you're *PROBABLY* safe but it's not something
you take chances with. Come a rainy day and it might be the last
thing you ever touch.
I have also had this problem at some cybercafes in Thailand.
My flash drive still works, maybe its life has been shortened, but
fortunately they're getting cheaper and cheaper. But I will avoid all
such computers in the future.
If your hands are dry you probably only get a mild tingle. I've
touched hot stuff twice in my life. In one case it was a fairly
strong tingle but I had been struggling to plug the stupid thing into
an awkward spot and so I'm sure my hands were a little bit sweaty.
The second time there was an unknown but probably fairly high
resistance in the circut as the contact was through burned food. That
gave a very mild tingle.
All that means is that the resistance of your fingers is high. With a sweaty
finger, or touching at a cut or even freshly healed skin, the resistance
decreases and the current increases and that mild tingle can turn into
something much more serious.
If you measure that voltage, it's 120 VAC or 240, whatever they use in
Vietnam.
Anyway, be careful.
-John O