
Despite being more pleasing to the eye, certain segments of the chassis act as fingerprint magnets. The new chassis design is definitely more stylish compared to the previous generation. The My Book unit also comes with a Kensington lock slot. The aspects to note here include the 18W adapter bundled with the My Book, and the longer USB 3.0 cable bundled with it. The gallery below shows the updated chassis design of the two units and a look at the contents of the two packages. Today's review will take a look at the latest versions of the My Book and the My Passport. The refresh last week changes only the chassis and retains the internals from the previous model. Western Digital has been selling these external storage devices with the highest storage capacity drives in their class for some time now (the 3.5" 8TB version in the My Book, and the 2.5" 4TB version in the My Passport). The My Book and My Passport product lines were updated last week with a new industrial design. For example, the My Passport product line focuses on striking a balance between capacity and portability, while the My Book targets a 'desktop' use-case with external power, but much higher capacity. Within the USB storage bridge market segment, Western Digital has a number of product lines tuned to specific use-cases. These DAS units usually employ a USB port to connect to the host (Thunderbolt is also popular in the high-end market). Western Digital has a number of direct-attached storage (DAS) products based on hard drives.
