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  2. Flucard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flucard

    FluCard is a wireless SD card used primarily with digital cameras. The Flucard is manufactured by Trek 2000 International, which is the Singaporean company that is one of the purported inventors of the ThumbDrive technology.

  3. Eye-Fi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eye-Fi

    An Eye-Fi card for sale in Tokyo, February 2010 A disassembled 16 GB Eye-Fi card 4 GB Eye-Fi card in a CompactFlash adapter. Eye-Fi was a company based in Mountain View, California, that produced SD memory cards with Wi-Fi capabilities.

  4. Comparison of memory cards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_memory_cards

    XM (requires an eXternal electro-mechanical adapter) – Technically the same as EM, but such adapter usually consists of 2 parts: a pseudo-card with pin routing and physical enclosure size that perfectly match the target slot and a break-out box (a card reader) that holds a real card. Such adapter is the least comfortable to use.

  5. Memory card - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory_card

    In 1994, memory card formats smaller than the PC Card arrived. The first one was CompactFlash and later SmartMedia and Miniature Card. The desire for smaller cards for cell-phones, PDAs, and compact digital cameras drove a trend that left the previous generation of "compact" cards looking big. In 2000 the SD card was announced.

  6. SD card - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SD_card

    Windows Phone 7 devices use SD cards designed for access only by the phone manufacturer or mobile provider. An SD card inserted into the phone underneath the battery compartment becomes locked "to the phone with an automatically generated key" so that "the SD card cannot be read by another phone, device, or PC". [122]

  7. USB On-The-Go - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB_On-The-Go

    USB OTG adapters, hubs and card readers. When an OTG-enabled device is connected to a PC, it uses its own USB-A or USB Type-C cable (typically ending in micro-B, USB-C or Lightning plugs for modern devices). When an OTG-enabled device is attached to a USB device, such as a flash drive, the device must either end in the appropriate connection ...

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