World’s Fastest High-Capacity Memory Card Features SanDisk Power Core Controller That Optimizes Card Endurance and Boosts Read/Write Speed to up to 90MB/s SanDisk Corporation today introduced a new ...
Any professional photographer who has bought a cheap flash memory card and spent hours offloading gigabytes of images, or had their memory card stall when trying to shoot in burst mode, would know ...
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 ...
SanDisk Doubles Capacity of High-Performance CF Industrial Memory Card for Mission-Critical Mass Storage Applications — The 16-GB CompactFlash 5000 Meets Next Generation Demands for High Capacity and ...
SanDisk have just outed a new range of Compact Flash memory cards aimed a pro-photographers, the SanDisk Extreme Pro series, promising capacities ranging from 16GB to 64GB and read/write speeds of ...
Hanover, Germany SanDisk Corp. is doubling the capacity of its CompactFlash 5000 flash memory cards for industrial markets. In addition to fast read and write speeds, the cards provide a high level of ...
Despite rumors of a buyout, it is business as usual for SanDisk which today expanded its Extreme III lineup with a new 32GB CompactFlash card. This represents a 100 percent increase over the previous ...
Fair warning to penny pinching shoppers and budget buyers, continuing to read beyond this point could put your wallet in a state of shock and/or cause you to fall out of your chair. Disclaimer aside, ...
September 24, 2008 SanDisk has used the Photokina trade fair to announce a 12.5-percent jump in speed (now 45 megabytes per second) and the addition of a 16-gigabyte version to its Extreme IV ...
SanDisk Extreme Pro CFast 2.0 Memory Card is The World's Fastest Memory Card For High-Performance Professional Photo and Video Capture The 120GB SanDisk Extreme Pro CFast 2.0 memory card is the ...
In this day and age, card readers have evolved into all types of form factors, some even built into OEM PCs. Now that we have successfully migrated to USB 3.0, transferring files from our memory cards ...