Posts Tagged Storage Card

Kingston 2 GB microSD Flash Memory Card with SD and miniSD Adapters SDC/2GB-2ADP

Posted by on Sunday, 4 July, 2010

Kingston 2 GB microSD Flash Memory Card with SD and miniSD Adapters SDC/2GB-2ADP

  • 100% Tested for Reliability
  • Free Technical Support
  • Easy to Follow Installation Instructions
  • Designed to Meet or Exceed Industry Standards for Performance and Reliability

2GB microSD w/2 Adapters Useful in multiple devices, Kingston’s microSD card with an extra miniSD and full-size SD adapter is a simple and practical, cross-platform storage solution. The adapters transform the microSD card into either a miniSD or full-size SD card, making it extremely versatile. With a 2 GB storage capacity, the microSD card alone provides plenty of removable space for music, games, ringtones, photos, movies, and other applications on mobile phones. Slip the microSD card into the miniSD adapter, and it transforms into a miniSD storage card for personal media players, smartphones, MP3 players, or other miniSD-enabled devices. Use the adapter to capture photos from your digital camera by making the microSD a full-size SD card, and then view images with the Kingston SD-enabled readers or on your TV’s SD slot. When the SD adapter is used with the microSD card, it quickly and easily saves files on a notebook computer with a full-size SD slot. The combination of a microS

Rating: (out of 40 reviews)

List Price: $ 24.99

Price: Too low to display


Kingston 4 GB microSDHC Class 4 Flash Memory Card SDC4/4GB

Posted by on Wednesday, 2 June, 2010

Kingston 4 GB microSDHC Class 4 Flash Memory Card SDC4/4GB

  • 4GB microSDHC Class 4 Memory Card
  • 4GB storage card for your microSDHC compatible mobile device.
  • When combined with a Kingston adapter, this card can be used as a full-size SDHC card.
  • FAT 32 File Format
  • Compliant with the SD Specification Version 2.00

Kingston’s microSDHC card allows you to maximize your high-powered mobile device. Starting at 4GB, microSDHC cards offer higher storage for more music, more videos, more pictures, more games — more of everything you need in today’s mobile world. Kingston’s microSDHC cards use the new speed class rating of Class 4 that guarantee a minimum data transfer rate of 4MB/sec. for optimum performance with devices that use microSDHC. Identical in physical size to standard microSD card, the microSDHC cards are designed to comply with SD Specification Version 2.00 and are only recognized by microSDHC host devices. They can be used as full-size SDHC cards when used with the included adapter. To ensure compatibility, look for the microSDHC or SDHC logo on host devices (e.g. phones, PDAs, and cameras).To help with everything you carry in today’s mobile world, this Kingston microSDHC Card offers higher storage for more music, more videos, more pictures, and more games. Maximizing your mobile dev

Rating: (out of 335 reviews)

List Price: $ 28.99

Price: $ 5.86


Terms To know in Digital Camera

Posted by on Saturday, 24 October, 2009

It helps when learning to use your new digital camera to also know what some of the more common terms mean.Below you’ill find alot of this general terms defined..

Automatic Mode  :

A setting that sets the focus, exposure and white-balance automatically.

Burst Mode or Continuous Capture Mode :

With one press of the shutter button, a series of pictures taken one after another at quickly timed intervals.

Compression :

The process of compacting digital data, images and text by deleting selected information.

Digital Zoom :

Cropping and magnifying the center part of an image.

JPEG :

The predominant format used for image compression in digital cameras.

Lag Time :

When the camera actually captures the image, there is the pause between the time the shutter button is pressed.

LCD :

(Liquid-Crystal Display) is a small screen on a digital camera for viewing images.

Lens :

A circular and transparent glass or plastic piece that has the function of collecting light and focusing it on the sensor to capture the image.

Megabyte :

(MB) Measures 1024 Kilobytes, and refers to the amount of information in a file, or how much information can be contained on a Memory Card, Hard Drive or Disk.

Pixels :

Tiny units of color that make up digital pictures. Pixels also measure digital resolution. One million pixels adds up to one mega-pixel.

RGB :

Refers to Red, Green, Blue colors used on computers to create all other colors.

Resolution :

Camera resolution describes the number of pixels used to create the image, which determines the amount of detail a camera can capture. The more pixels cameras have, the more detail it can register & the larger the picture can be printed.

Storage Card :

Holds images taken with the camera, comparable to film, using smaller removable storage device. Also called a digital camera memory card.

Viewfinder :

The optical “window” to look through to compose the scene.

White Balance :

White balancing adjusts the camera to compensate for the type of light (daylight, fluorescent, incandescent, etc.,) or lighting conditions in the scene so it will look normal to the human eye.

 


OCZ Slate SSD Reviewed. Verdict: ExpressCard & USB 2.0 Make Quite a Team

Posted by on Saturday, 23 May, 2009

By Ian Chiu

We laptop owners can easily run out of storage space since most 2.5″ drives are still relatively small in capacity. Other than paying notebook vendors for over-priced hard drives to keep our warranty and then spending a beautiful weekend afternoon on drive cloning, there is a simpler and time-saving way to expand storage without breaking the bank. This is where OCZ Slate SSD comes in. The USB-based Slate is basically like any other flash drives except it is housed in an ExpressCard. The design allows the storage card to fit snugly inside the ExpressCard slot without the risk of it breaking off. On the opposite side of the ExpressCard connector is a mini USB 2.0 port which can be used for hooking up with desktop PCs or older laptops.

The Slate performance is decent with read speed topping at 30MB/s and write speed hovering between 15 and 17MB/s. The card doesn’t have a native PCI Express interface so USB 2.0 will always remain the bandwidth bottleneck for this product. Everything USB discovered the Slate to be particularly useful for storing music, video & photos as you can easily relocate them to the card and Slate’s speeds can easily handle even multiple 1080p HD playback. Overall, if you’ve an unused ExpressCard slot on your notebook, and don’t plan on getting a 3G wireless modem card, the Slate is something you should check out as an effortless storage option.

[OCZ Slate SSD ExpressCard Review @ Everything USB]