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Flash!
Flash! Flash! and more Flash!
No sensationalism on my title. I am just representing the dizzying flash memory card variants around. Being part of support team of a tech store, one of the FAQs is the variety of Flash Memory available. Most digital cameras, music players, and PDAs use flash memory cards to store data. These small media cards hold anywhere from 8MB to 1GB of data. With assortment of cards available you should choose carefully. People would ask 'what size flash card should I buy'. Answer to this depends is on what files/media you'll throw to the card. Office files onto your handhelds, 32MB would be sufficient. A 64MB should contain 13 MP3 songs, for the rocker in us, this is not enough. Same holds true for a pro photographer or a photo enthusiast, 256MB and above is suggested to store all those megapixel-Diana-Zubiri-wallpapers. <link to Diana Zubiri gallery at bembang.com> If you care to know, transfer rate of flash memory is about 1 MBps. New technologies and interfaces can double or triple that rate, but you will pay extra, nothing is free as we all know. I am taking it back, some things are free. Card memory is more expensive than hard drive pound-4-pound, bit-4-bit I should say. But the emergence of digital this and digital that makes us forget its price. We need small and removable memory. If you care to know part 2, the birth of these cards happened when megapixel digicams emerged in the mid-90s. A quick overview for you, SmartMedia (SM) is the first standards-based memory
card MultiMediaCard (MMC) is another pioneer. With its rigid plastic shell, it is less damage-prone. Same footprint and pin-out as its successor, the Secure Digital (SD) card. MMCs fit in SD devices but not vice-versa (SD cards are thicker). SD music players typically won't play audio from an MMC, because SD players require encrypted music. Most companies are currently phasing out MMC devices. CompactFlash (CF) is old but far-from-dead flash memory champion. The living-legend
of memory cards, we can say. More devices currently use CF than any other
media type. Secure Digital (SD) has the broadest support and brightest future. I love
SD! It is small and can contain GB data. The drawback is that SD players,
like Memory Stick players, require you to check out music from your
PC. Knowing these things will save the buyer time, makes his money
well-spent and will definitely make a job like mine, easier. |
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