The Basics:
We'll take a look at this tiny drive in the next few images. The device is mostly metal, with an integrated black plastic cap that covers the microUSB connector when not in use. On one side of the metal housing you will find a small loop that could be used to secure your drive to a key ring or lanyard.
The next two images show the drive with the plastic capped hinged 90 degrees to reveal the microUSB connector.
In Use:
The most intriguing thing while in use was to see if it connected to a USB OTG capable Android phone, and how it would work. As shown below, the Storage section of Android's settings clearly show a USB On-The-Go storage device is attached, and the formatted capacity corresponds to a 32GB drive.
This phone has ES File Explorer installed for file management, and I was easily able to browse to the Kingston drives storage space. Nothing to install, no configurations to edit... Just 32GB of extra storage that is easily accessible from the phone. On my PC, it worked just like any other flash drive, which should obviously be expected.