Every morning I load a set of podcasts onto a USB flash drive so I can play them in my car. Occasionally I will have a very strange problem where the mp3 files somehow get mixed. That is, I will be in the middle of one podcast, then I will all of a sudden hear some static, and then I will be at some random point in a different podcast on the drive. After a few seconds to a couple minutes, I will again hear static and will then be back to the original podcast.
Today I had an even stranger occurrence: I was listening to one podcast, but then it cut into a different podcast that had been deleted from the device the night before. After about a minute of this, it cut back into the original podcast. It's like the data from the original podcast wasn't actually deleted and there was somehow still a pointer to it on the USB drive.
Does anyone know what could be going on here? The obvious answer is "the flash drive is dying, get a new one", but I just ran several passes of Check Flash (http://www.softpedia.com/get/System/Boot-Manager-Disk/Check-Flash.shtml) and the USB drive passed without errors.
The corrupt mp3 file displays the strange behavior if I play the USB drive on either my car stereo or home PC, so I know it's the file and not the player.
I already checked that my USB flash drive is set to "optimize for quick removal" in Device Manager, meaning that I shouldn't have to use the "safely unplug hardware" link before unplugging the drive.
Does anyone know what could be causing this?
Today I had an even stranger occurrence: I was listening to one podcast, but then it cut into a different podcast that had been deleted from the device the night before. After about a minute of this, it cut back into the original podcast. It's like the data from the original podcast wasn't actually deleted and there was somehow still a pointer to it on the USB drive.
Does anyone know what could be going on here? The obvious answer is "the flash drive is dying, get a new one", but I just ran several passes of Check Flash (http://www.softpedia.com/get/System/Boot-Manager-Disk/Check-Flash.shtml) and the USB drive passed without errors.
The corrupt mp3 file displays the strange behavior if I play the USB drive on either my car stereo or home PC, so I know it's the file and not the player.
I already checked that my USB flash drive is set to "optimize for quick removal" in Device Manager, meaning that I shouldn't have to use the "safely unplug hardware" link before unplugging the drive.
Does anyone know what could be causing this?