Originally posted by: AMCRambler
In order to connect one USB drive to two computers you'd need to have a usb hub there. And I have no idea what would happen, but since the USB bus also supplies power, I can't imagine it would be very good. You'd probably fry both usb controllers on the computers.
And yes the usb switch would just be a simple AB switch with a selector button
		
		
	 
	
	
		
		
			Originally posted by: mshan
Any danger of damage if you connect a single usb external hard drive to two separate hard drives and accidentally have both computers on at the same time? 
EDIT: and is that switch above a simple, driverless, manual switch that should work with any operating system?
		
		
	 
A USB hub can't be used for this purpose. A hub only has one uplink port to one PC. There's no way to connect to two PCs. Even if you made a splitter for the uplink, I don't think it would cause any damage to anything (it would just be a parallel circuit), but it most likely would not work, since the USB device only can function with a single master controller, and would be getting conflicting signals from the two PCs. It would probably work if only one was turned on at the same time, but still could cause problems since when you turn an ATX system "off", it's still got power to the mainboard, and may be set to sense USB activity.
Any USB switch would have to be OS independent. The linked switch is manual by pressing a button (which means it's just an electrical switch, rather than a physical switch, which is good). Others are controlled with a key combination on the keyboard (like hitting scroll-lock twice within 2 seconds). All 3 are also methods that regular KVM units are controlled.
That switch also looks like it may have a big brother model, which would allow 4 PCs to be connected. Looks like they just used the same outer shell, unless those two outside lights are activity lights, which would be pointless.