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2008-02-12
, 12:56
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Posts: 282 |
Thanked: 69 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
@ Penniless Park, Fla.
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#2
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The Following User Says Thank You to linux_author For This Useful Post: | ||
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2008-02-12
, 13:29
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Posts: 357 |
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Joined on Sep 2007
@ Sunny England :)
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#3
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2008-02-12
, 15:25
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Posts: 7 |
Thanked: 2 times |
Joined on Jan 2008
@ London
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#4
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- actually, the limits you're asking about can generally be found by examining manufacturer information, industry information relating to standards, and current limitations for manufacturing fabs..
AFAIK, and I have confirmed this from testing and using them, mini-sd to sd adapters and there kin are just pin-converters, mapping from small to large. As SD and SDHC are pin-compatible, there are no reasons why there should need to be different adapters.
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2008-02-12
, 16:10
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Posts: 472 |
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Joined on Apr 2007
@ Texas
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#5
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The Following User Says Thank You to rcadden For This Useful Post: | ||
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2008-03-30
, 18:56
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Joined on Mar 2008
@ UK
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#6
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2008-03-30
, 19:31
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Posts: 123 |
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Joined on Jan 2008
@ South Bend, Indiana
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#7
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The Following User Says Thank You to spartanNTX For This Useful Post: | ||
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2008-03-30
, 19:44
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Posts: 8 |
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Joined on Mar 2008
@ UK
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#8
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2009-02-22
, 03:43
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Posts: 2 |
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Joined on Feb 2009
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#9
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A. Form Factor
As I understand it, the N810's card slot is miniSD in size and shape, and SDHC-compliant – which means it takes SDHC cards (Secure Digital High Capacity, SD 2.0). So it can take either a miniSDHC card, or a microSDHC card in a miniSD-sized adapter. Market research (up to 12 Feb 08) seems to indicate:
(a) miniSDHC card capacities only goes up to 4 GB (BTW, anybody know why?); and
(b) microSDHC card capacities are on the up and up: 8 GB cards available now, SanDisk's 12 GB card available from mid-Mar 08, and a 16 GB SanDisk card slated for Mar/Apr 08.
So I'd like to choose the 'microSDHC card in a miniSD-sized adapter' option, and that begs a question regarding those adapters.
B. Capacity
It seems from the above like a microSDHC card in a miniSD-sized adapter would be the route to take to get the highest memory capacity. BTW & FYI, any microSD card with a capacity of more than either 2 GB is a microSDHC card (or perhaps it's more than 4 GB – even the SD Card Association's own website is inconsistent [1] in this point). The trouble is, sometimes there's no mention of which type a particular card is on a retailer's product page, or the logo on a HC card itself [2] only says microSD (misleading, and only half true) rather than microSDHC (correct).
So, erm... if a 3 GB card existed, would it exist in a quantum superposition of being *BOTH* an SD card *AND* an SDHC card, until you actually tried to use it, thereby collapsing its waveform into the wrong type of card for your slot? (a little joke diversion for the physics geeks there, sorry).
Since "data expands to fill the available memory" (Parkinson's Law of Data) – or "the quantity of spare memory available is inversely proportional to time" (dalinian's corollary) – then there's no such thing as 'too much memory' in my book (or tablet). So I'd like to get the highest capacity card available.
C. Interoperability – N810 / N95 / Computer+microSDHC-card-reader
The N95 tech spec says, "Memory card slot supporting up to 4 GB microSD memory cards". And yet posters at discussions.nokia.co.uk say, "I have a 6Gb SDHC from Sandisk. Works fine," and "Just bought 8GB sandisk SDHC and it works fine." And an N95 FAQ [3] answers, "Does the N95 support 8 gig microSD cards?" with, "Yes and it has been said that it should support up to 32 gigs."
D. Speed
This subject is very well addressed on the wiki page 'Memory Cards: Is Speed Important?' on 'internet tablet talk' [3]. SDHC cards have SD Speed Class Ratings which specify the following minimum sustained write speed on to empty SDHC cards:
– Class 2: 2 MB/s
– Class 4: 4 MB/s
– Class 6: 6 MB/s
Note that these ratings say nothing about how fast you can read from a card, but it is safe to expect to be able to read faster (maybe much faster) than you can write to an SDHC card.
BUT... most retailers don't mention Speed Class Ratings in describing the cards they sell, and only some cards include a Speed Class Rating logo on the card itself: the number 2 or 4 or 6 enclosed in a capital 'C' character [4], with an optional 'CLASS' prefix.
E. Logo Inconsistencies
The SD Card Association develops and publishes technical standards for SD Card technology, and 'promotes' the use of the technology. But given the inconsistencies on the SD Card Association's own website [1], it's not too surprising that manufacturers are inconsistent in their use of type logos [2] and speed logos [4] on the cards they produce – both of which contribute significantly to the pre-purchasing confusion of consumers.
Thanks in advance for your attention, time and attentiveness to detail in clarifying these issues for this bemused consumer. Maybe a sticky post, a wiki page or some FAQ entries may come out of all this? If I don't lose the will to live first ;-)
References
To Questions
[1] Any microSD card with a capacity of more than either 2 GB or perhaps 4 GB is a microSDHC – even the SD Card Association's own website is inconsistent; eg:
(a) "SDHC (above 2GB) must have both the SDHC and the Speed Class logo" at http://www.sdcard.org/about/sdhc#1
(b) "The SDHC Logo is used for cards 4GB or higher in http://www.sdcard.org/home/img001.gif
[2] SD or SDHC logo on the card itself – see 'About SDHC Memory Card' at http://www.sdcard.org/about/sdhc#1
[3] The 'internet tablet talk' wiki page 'Memory Cards: Is Speed Important?' – http://www.internettablettalk.com/wi...d_Important%3F
[4] SD Speed Class Rating logos – here's what they should look like, according to the SD Card Association: http://www.sdcard.org/about/sdhc/sd_Comp_01.jpg
To Answers
[5] pixelseventy2 http://www.internettablettalk.com/fo...61&postcount=3
[6] linux_author http://www.internettablettalk.com/fo...52&postcount=2
[7] rcadden http://www.internettablettalk.com/fo...16&postcount=5
[8] Sandisk, High Capacity for SD Family, SDHC1.pdf http://www.sandisk.com/Assets/File/pdf/retail/SDHC1.pdf
[9] Sandisk, Product Compatibility, Nokia N95 http://www.sandisk.com/Compatibility...Nokia-N95.aspx
[10] 'Sandisk 12 GB microSDHC card (pre-order') http://www.uk-mobilestore.co.uk/prod...roducts_id=927 and 'Technology: 16 GB MicroSDHC cards are on the way!' http://www.symbian-freak.com/news/00...on_the_way.htm
Last edited by dalinian; 2008-02-14 at 11:58.