SanDisk has released a new line memory cards: the ExtremePro CompactFlash cards, which feature the company's Power Core Controller capability, an advanced memory controller that enables read and write ...
This $50 card can hold four CompactFlash cards configured in a RAID array--but cards aren't included in that price. Stephen Shankland worked at CNET from 1998 to 2024 and wrote about processors, ...
SanDisk Corp. has introduced the 12- and 16-gigabyte (GB) SanDisk Extreme® III CompactFlash® cards to its award-winning Extreme III performance line, making these the highest capacity cards in the ...
Logging data from a large number of monitored channels usually requires a lot of memory for storing the measured data. Unfortunately, smaller microcontrollers offer only limited amounts of internal ...
Thinking about swapping out that old fashioned hard drive in your netbook or laptop for a newfangled solid state disk, but don’t want to spend an arm and a leg? The Sans Digital CompactSTOR CS1T will ...
At work, I have a pc104 stack that uses a 512 meg CF card as the hard drive. I have linux installed, and have been using it to compile and run programs from.<BR><BR>It will be used inside an ...
With the new Rebel XSi, Canon wisely moved from Compact Flash to SD memory cards. Maybe it'll help put the xD and Memory Stick formats out of their misery. Stephen Shankland worked at CNET from 1998 ...
Lexar Media and Optosys Technologies GmbH today announced a collaboration to develop a new line of high-density CompactFlash cards. The new cards will use Lexar’s own ATA flash controller and will be ...
Not more than a week after the world saw the first 6.75MB/sec (45x) CompactFlash cards, Green House Corporation introduces their 12MB/sec (80x) cards. (All RAW, all the time, punk.) If you feel like ...
As if a 4GB CompactFlash memory card wasn’t enough of a great leap forward, there’s word now of a 6GB on the way from Pretec. Think about that for a second. And even if it turns out to not be true, ...
Toshiba America Electronic Components Inc. has introduced a 1GB CompactFlash card (designated the THNCF1G02MA), the highest density of CompactFlash currently available in a standard Type-I format.
Apart from, you know, losing data. =P I shoot with a huge stack of 8GB Sandisk CF cards and I'd love to weed out the ones that are nearing their usable lifetime. I have some older 4GB cards the give ...
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