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coach handbags stores pain to get working.It's a lot easier to plug in a portable drive. Also, once you've followed the first rule of backups (making one in the first place), a portable drive makes it easy to follow the second rule keeping your backup somewhere else.Given those requirements, Iomega's eGo is about as portable as a drive gets. Measuring 5 inches long by 3 inches wide by 3/4 of an inch deep and weighing less than 8 ounces it's a shade too large for a shirt pocket but will slip easily into a briefcase, laptop compartment or handbag.What really makes the eGo portable is that it draws power from the computer's USB port, so it doesn't need a separate power cord or adapter.The downside to this arrangement is that not all USB ports are created equal. Some deliver more power than others and you may run into one that doesn't provide enough juice to drive a 5,400 rpm hard drive.Iomega deals with that possibility by building an extension jack into its USB cable to draw additional power from a second USB port assuming there's a free one left on your computer. If not, you'll need a self powered USB hub. At $15 to $20 on the street, these are useful accessories to have in any event.Setting up the eGo was simple. Following the brief instructions, I plugged one end of the cable into a USB port on my PC and the other into the drive. There's no on off switch. A few seconds later my computer beeped and the eGo showed up on the device list when I clicked the My Computer icon on the Windows desktop.At this point, the eGo behaves like any other hard drive and it will work with both PCs and Macs. For scheduled backups,