Computer Active (UK)

Lacie Porsche Design s-mobile Drive USB-C 2TB Shiny bytes

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Porsche Design is a subsidiary of the car company which sells accessorie­s and licenses the name to non-car manufactur­ers. How much connection there is between the design of Porsche cars and the design of things with ‘Porsche Design’ written on them is a matter for conjecture, but whoever styled this external hard drive has impeccable taste. The shiny aluminium exterior, reminiscen­t of a classic cigarette case, has just enough detailing, in a chamfered inset on the top edge, to make you want to pick it up and run your thumb over it. You’ll need to polish it afterwards, though. A gold colour option is also available. It has a USB Type-c port for the latest laptops, and comes with an adapter cable for USB 3.0.

The manufactur­er’s suggested price for the 2TB drive is £110, but Amazon is selling it for just £85, a fiver more than the 1TB version, which you’d therefore be daft to buy. Lacie also has 4TB and 5TB drives under the same name, but they’re bulkier. £85 is about a tenner more than the 2TB version of the Seagate Backup Plus Ultra Slim drive (see our review, Issue 519). Lacie, incidental­ly, is owned by Seagate.

The Backup Plus Ultra Slim was just a fraction slower in our write-speed tests and a fraction faster when reading, but really there’s nothing in it. It’s slow compared with an SSD, but above average for a hard drive. It makes virtually no noise.

The Seagate drive is slightly smaller and noticeably lighter than Lacie’s, which feels more robust, although the mechanism probably wouldn’t fare any better in a hard drop. It’s still very portable. Where Seagate’s included backup software is only for Windows, Lacie’s is only for Macs, and the drive also comes with software to quickly format it for macos, so it might appeal more to Mac users.

Then again, none of this is essential, and what you’re really paying for is the hardware. So what you’re left with is a tenner for the USB Type-c port, which the Seagate drive lacks – and, of course, Porsche Design written on the top, which is priceless. Wireless keyboards From £9 to £90 – which should you pick? Medion Erazer X5361 G i5 desktop PC with GTX 1070 graphics for £900

It looks stunning, feels robust and – unlike a Porsche – doesn’t cost the earth

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