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 ...
Kingston Technology Company, Inc., the independent world leader in memory products, today announced the new Kingston Media Reader, an external, hi-speed reader designed to support 19 popular types of ...
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 ...
SanDisk Corp. has introduced four new ImageMate flash memory card readers. All the new readers sport USB 2.0 compatibility, though they’re downwardly compatible with the slower USB 1.1 interface still ...
Built to offload media from a microSD card at extreme speeds, the Performance Prime USB 3.2 Gen 1 microSD Card Reader is an essential tool for professionals, content creators, and advanced users to ...
Digital memory cards fit into readers on our electronic gadgets. We use these memory devices to store photos, movies, games, documents and more. Secure Digital is a proprietary flash memory card ...
On Monday Addonics announced a flash memory card reader that has support for a external Serial ATA (eSATA) connection. The new portable Pocket eSATA/USB DigiDrive has an eSATA port that offers a data ...
Flash memory technology is more than 30 years old, but has only lately become a big part of the computing landscape. Flash chips, of course, are memory modules that retain their data even when the ...
We’re starting to warm up to these guys at Buffalo Corp., a Japanese company that’s thinking of some great ideas and has already impressed us with its innovative Double Click Mouse today. Next, it ...
So yeah, these are just USB flash memory card readers, but I’m a sucker for tight design — especially when it uses the sort of played-out but still delicious grey-on-white soft cuddle robot color ...
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 ...
Can flash memory cards spread malicious code? Yes they can, and a lot of people fail to scan them for viruses and other malware. Malicious software spread via removable storage remains a serious ...
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