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No assumptions are even required because this commenter is simply flat out wrong. See the breakdown here, or TL;DR: It would be trivial to mount a drive up to 2.2 TB (not GB, not MB...) using 2002 hardware.
I think a bigger assumption in this scenario is that if you're reborn as a random 10 year old holding a USB flash drive, you'll zap to a place on the globe with ready access to a recent computer.
Yep. My household in 2002 had a computer, but that's because I had a parent who worked in IT. Most people I knew at the time didn't have one. By 2002, ~40% of the United States still did not have access to a computer at home, though the gap would keep closing year over year.
But that's just data for the United States. Other countries may have had lower rates of adoption at that time, and in a scenario where you would be less likely to wake up in a random household with a computer, it would require a bit more thinking to figure out how to get access to one.
I'd probably look to schools and libraries as a place to start. If that's not an option, then it'd be figuring out how to befriend a local rich kid who might have a computer. Otherwise, the USB is effectively a paperweight for some time and you're left only with your memories of the future for guidance until computer access becomes more available.
Oh jeez I grew up with an engineer father and a mom who did punch card programming back in the day and just kinda assumed most people had a computer in the 90s