The
Dex Drive itself is highly durable. It is a solid piece of equipment. Although I don?t recommend it, the
Dex Drive will probably sustain a fall from your computer desk. Also, the
Dex Drive is actually quite small. It is only slightly wider than your PlayStation?s memory cards, and only about three inches high by four inches long. It will easily find space on your crowded desk!
The Dex Drive is connected to your PC via an open com port. (You will need one until InterAct decides to support the USB interface.) The installation instructions that come with the device are straightforward and easy to understand. It is as simple as plugging the device in and installing the software.
The DexPlorer software that is shipped with the Dex Drive is very easily learned. It has every control available in the PlayStation?s Memory Card Manager, with the same basic interface. Its simple interface shows you the contents of your inserted PlayStation memory card in the left window and the contents of your ?virtual? memory card (from your PC?s hard drive) in the right window.
InterAct has a lot of support for their product (including EA Sports). Users can e-mail InterAct their saved games which will be posted onto their website. On this website, users have access to download hundreds of saves to try out new tricks, use cheats (some Game Shark exclusive), play with user-created players, play with updated sports rosters, try to beat other people?s high scores... the list goes on.
Another worthy note is that bleem! (PlayStation emulator) supports the Dex Drive?s .gme file extension. However, bleem! will convert the file to the readable .mcd extension and you will need an external program to convert it back.