Introduction: Pink Eraser USB Flash Drive
Want to make a flash drive that nobody in a modern office would even think about taking? Hide it in a pink eraser and it's secure in this digital age.
Step 1: Get Your Erasers and Flash Drive
You can get a couple of erasers in an office supply store or an art store. They're cheap.
The flash drive I got at an office supply store. I got a 1 gig since I barely ever use that much as I use flash drives for moving small files around. I don't need anything bigger for now. This is also pretty cheap.
Bonus points for the pink cap on it. It was like this flash drive wanted to be in an eraser from the beginning.
Step 2: Cut the Erasers
One eraser is used for the flash drive and the other will serve as the cap. You'll want to use almost all of one eraser for the drive and about half for the cap.
Step 3: Free Up the Flash Drive
The plastic case on my flash drive was easy to pull apart. Just work a fingernail between the pieces and pull it apart.
Once it's open you can behold just how tiny the real flash drive is.
Step 4: Hollow Out the Pieces
I grabbed a rotary tool and quickly dug out a gap in each piece. Keep testing the fit with the flash drive until it's nice and snug. The same thing goes for the cap.
Step 5: Put It All Together and Start Putting Some Files on It
Take a moment to admire the results and then put that flash drive to work! Put some files on there to print out elsewhere and make it earn its keep.
Step 6: Watch It Get Copied
As people have noted several times in the comments, you can buy something like this at Target now. Checking on the site, I found it here. It's also listed on Amazon here where it shows that it's been offered since July 13, over three months after this was published.
Sure, you could buy one for $18, but why would you want to? Here are a few reasons not to be a sucker and just make it yourself:
- The case is plastic which means that it doesn't look or feel right at all.
- You only get 1GB for $18. You can get 4GB for under $13.
- The case says Dane-Elec on it
- Dane-Elec!?!

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286 Comments
14 years ago on Introduction
I wonder.
Reply 4 years ago
Why's it called "a pair of underwear" if it has no pair?
Reply 4 years ago
Me too.
Reply 4 years ago
Why do we celebrate birthdays if they just mean another year closer to our death?
Reply 4 years ago
Is everything eyes see not how it looks like? Why can only eyes see? Why is color a thing?
Reply 4 years ago
Are there more lies or truth in a person’s life?
Reply 13 years ago on Introduction
Do Chinese people get English tattoos?
Reply 13 years ago on Introduction
Hmmm... Why's it called a parkway if you drive on it? Why's it called a driveway if you park on it? Why does a shipment go by car and a cargo by ship? If a vegetarian eats veg, what does an humanitarian eat? Writers write but fingers don't fing. A slim chance and a fat chance are similar. An alarm goes off by going on. Quicksand works slowly. Boxing rings are square. Guinea pigs are neither from Guinea or are pigs. when the stars are out, you see their light but when the lights are out you see nothing. Ok. I'm done. lol
Reply 12 years ago on Introduction
have you ever been downset??
never allow yourself to be scared half to death.......twice.
Reply 4 years ago
Gosh, you’re good.
Reply 13 years ago on Introduction
42. thats why.
Reply 13 years ago on Introduction
No. Seven, because seven is the ultimate number. You know why?
Reply 7 years ago
ya, 7 is a magical number( seventh son of a seventh son)
Reply 13 years ago on Introduction
Thats true but you obviously haven't watched the hitch hikers guide to the galaxy :P
Reply 13 years ago on Introduction
because 7 8 9. LOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOL....I'll stop now.
Reply 12 years ago on Introduction
you forgot one,
GO AHEAD AND BACK UP!
Reply 13 years ago on Introduction
If a quiz makes you quizzical, what does a test make you?
Reply 13 years ago on Introduction
why does Hawaii have an interstate?
Reply 13 years ago on Introduction
I know! I know!
Hawaii's interstate highway system (heck, the ENTIRE US highway system) was part of a strategic military program that was put in place by Dwight D. Eisenhower. In Roman times, roads were used not only for peaceful transportation, but also for war chariots. Good roads=faster military response. Faster military response=better control over a large area. Same thing with the US highway system: good highways=faster military response. Faster military response=more tanks moving faster. More tanks moving faster=a smaller chance that the "commies" would take over Alaska.
If one were to look at a map of Hawaii, one would notice something about the highways: they connect every military base on the island.
H1: Goes past US Coast Guard air station at Barbers Point past Pearl Harbor, Ford island and Hickam Air Force base. Connects to H2, H3, and H201
H2: One end starts about 2000 ft east of Schofield Barracks and Naval airstation. Connects to H1.
H3: One end starts about 2000 ft south of Kaneohe Marine Corps base. Connects with H1 and H201.
H201: Onramp about 600ft west from Fort Shafter. Connects with H1 and H3.
The reason they (Not only in Hawaii, mind you) are called "Interstate Highways" is because they are funded federally by a grant shared by the states.
Reply 13 years ago on Introduction
hmmm....