Flash memory is everywhere and moving data between it and the PC can be a chore if you don’t have the right mechanism. The SanDisk USB 2.0 ImageMate 12-in-1 Card Reader/Writer handles all of the ...
March 28, 2006 More innovative thought is being focussed on the flash drive than we thought possible, because every week or so, we seem to run another story about an important new design feature ...
Los Angeles, CA, April 17, 2006 — Digital Foci announced today Memory Card Gateway, a high-speed USB 2.0 memory card reader/writer for virtually all memory card formats, including CompactFlash Type ...
New products eliminate multiple adapters and cable clutter, enabling users to upload files and images from cell phones, digital cameras and other devices in one step Today’s savvy digital consumers ...
The RIDATA 11-in-1 memory-card reader/writer features USB 2.0 connectivity and a transfer rate as fast as 480 Mbytes/sec and supports virtually all of the most popular storage cards. It is compatible ...
Memory cards are extremely handy pieces of hardware. Being able to store thousands of photographs on a storage medium the size of a postage stamp is pretty amazing. (Yes, postage stamps still exist.) ...
Sonnet Technologies today announced the introduction of its new 21-in-1 Multimedia Memory Card Reader & Writer for ExpressCard slots. This product replaces Sonnet’s popular reader-only version at the ...
Plenty of inexpensive USB-C memory card adapters are now on the market. But would you consider spending about $50 for one? If it’s the SanDisk Extreme Pro UHS-II SD Card USB-C Reader ($47 on Amazon), ...
If you find yourself in the other camp of the RFID “controversy”, then you might be interested to learn that Wireless Dynamics has developed the first RFID Reader/Writer SD card. Any device with an SD ...
Dec 30th, 2002, Taipei, Taiwan—IWILL® Corp. announced the smallest 6-in1 memory card reader/writer all over the world, IWILL® CR611. With well-experienced in high-end workstation and server solution, ...
A peripheral device that reads and writes a memory card made of flash memory chips. First available as external devices for one type of card, readers were subsequently built into the computer to ...