Fast data transfer speeds for high-volume photographers.SanDisk has just released a new Extreme IV line of memory cards, which are designed to meet the needs of professional photographers who use high ...
The 1990's were a time of innovation. CERN laid out the plans for the World Wide Web, Intel launched its Pentium processor, Digital SLR cameras made their first appearance and a company still in its ...
SanDisk has introduced the new SanDisk Extreme IV line of CompactFlash digital film cards for professional photographers. The line is targeted at photographers who require the highest possible ...
SanDisk has today announced its new Extreme IV CompactFlash cards and the Extreme Firewire 800/400 reader. These new cards will be available in 2, 4 and 8 GB capacities and are rated as delivering ...
Improve your workflow with blazing-fast transfer speeds. I started making the switch to mirrorless cameras a little over a year ago when I bought my Canon EOS-R. The camera has been a champ and it ...
CeBIT 2003: SanDisk has today announced their ImageMate™ card readers for a variety of popular flash memory cards. The four new ImageMate models, all with hi-speed USB 2.0 connectivity, are available ...
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 have introduced the Sandisk Hi-Speed USB 2.0 ImageMate 8-in-1 card reader. Designed for consumers who rely on a variety of flash memory cards for their digital cameras, PDAs, MP3 players or ...
Continuing the march toward ever-larger-capacity memory cards, SanDisk announced three new cards at the Photokina trade show in Germany. Two of the new cards, 12GB and 16GB CompactFlash cards, carry ...
My digital camera probably works well with GPhoto, but I've never tried it. I find it more convenient to use a Flash card reader. The SanDisk ImageMate Dual Readers are a line of external USB Flash ...
I have a pcmcia one right now, its a sandisk. The problem is, whenever I transfer files from it to the laptop, it pegs the system to 100%. This shouldn't be happening. Would getting a 32 bit cardbus ...