Kingston CF/1GB-S 1 GB High Speed Compactflash Card |

enlarge | Brand: Kingston Category: CE
List Price: $39.95 Buy New: $10.77 You Save: $29.18 (73%)
New (7) from $10.77
Rating: 1 reviews
Media: Electronics Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Fragile: No Batteries Included: No System Memory: 2.56E8 Memory Type: SODIMM Hard Drive Size: 30000 Display Size: 66.92913385826772 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 7 x 1 x 5 Legal Disclaimer: Warranty does not cover misuse of product. Warranty: Limited lifetime warranty
MPN: CF/1GB-S Model: CF/1GB-S UPC: 740617088236 EAN: 0740617088236 ASIN: B000CQRD4S
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Features:
| • | Standardized compliance with CompactFlash Association specification standards | | • | One-third the size of a full-size PC card | | • | Compatible with PC Card Type II adapters | | • | Autosleep mode preserves system battery life | | • | 50x Speed, 10MB per seconds read rate, 8MB per seconds write rate |
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Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Imaging pros expect a lot from their equipment and can't afford to have a component limit their productivity or creativity. That's where Kingston's CompactFlash Elite Pro memory cards come in. They're designed specifically to help advanced amateur or professional photographers get the best performance from their high-end imaging devices and applications.
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Customer Reviews:
Of dubious quality, with faulty sectors October 8, 2006 D. Carraway 19 out of 19 found this review helpful
It's always hard to judge product quality from anecdotal evidence, but I purchased one of these in mid 2006. On using it, my camera crashed pretty often, eventually being unable to finish booting at all with the card installed -- a problem it had never exhibited with other CF cards. Eventually I fed it to a PC and ran a badblocks scan on the thing, which turned up several dozen bad blocks, some of them in the regions generally used for metadata on the FAT filesystem most cameras use. That's potentially a serious issue, because while all modern filesystems can be given lists of bad blocks to avoid, rendering partially faulty media usable, digital cameras and other embedded devices often use partial implementations of filesystem standards and may not honor bad block lists.
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