SanDisk introduced its latest CompactFlash memory card for DSLR cameras and professional video cameras today. I have mentioned before that I like to shoot pictures with a Nikon D80. One of the reasons ...
With a lot of the hype surrounding the new U3 specification of SD cards, Sandisk slipped in under the radar with its latest solution. The Sandisk Extreme Pro carries quite a performance boost for ...
SanDisk is claiming to have announced the world’s fastest 32GB SDHC flash memory card with a Class 10 performance rating. This new card is ideal for HD video and high-end cameras such as the latest ...
Flash card sizes continue to grow, and SanDisk has moved another rung up the ladder with its $350 32GB SDHC card, which will ship in April. Stephen Shankland worked at CNET from 1998 to 2024 and wrote ...
If that 16GB microSDHC card in your mobile phone is starting to burst at the seams with music and video files, not to mention photos of your BFF, then Sandisk’s new 32GB card is arriving just in time.
Currently, smartphone MicroSD cards top out at 16GB. Removable card would match maximum internal capacity of high-end phones like the iPhone 3GS and Nexus One. Brooke Crothers writes about mobile ...
Designed for Camcorders and Digital Cameras That Capture Still Images and Video, New SanDisk Cards Offer 50 Percent Faster Read and Write Speeds; 32GB is Industry-Leading Capacity Giving photo ...
In this day and age speed is everything, next to capacity of course. Sandisk, with their wide knowledge of flash memory systems, has once again raised the bar, the bar that they set themselves with ...
SanDisk today announced a removable memory card for mobile phones that offers a whopping 32-gigabytes of storage–not too shabby for a device that’s roughly the size of a thumbnail. The new microSDHC ...
SanDisk recently announced a 32GB SD card (pictured) at PMA08 that will retail for US$349 in April. That's a lot of meggers (as an old client used to say) in a tiny little chip. So what does this new ...
With only 32GB of storage available within the system itself (or 64GB if you have a Switch OLED), Nintendo Switch has always had one significant weak point – storing digital games. MicroSD cards have ...