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Slim and small (20 mm × 25 mm × 1.78 mm) but slower read/write, no wear-leveling controller, up to 2 GB [8] Type H 2005 2 GB Slim and small (20 mm × 25 mm × 1.78 mm) and swifter, no wear-leveling controller, up to 2 GB [8] XQD card: Sony & Nikon Standard 2011–2012 >2 TB High-capacity, high-speed standard using PCIe as interface Universal ...
Game cards for the Nintendo 3DS are from 1 to 8 gigabytes in size, [8] with 2 GB of game data at launch. [9] They look very similar to DS game cards, but are incompatible and have a small tab on one side to prevent them from being inserted into a DS, DS Lite, DSi or DSi XL/LL.
1.6 × 10 12 bits (200 gigabytes) – capacity of a hard disk that would be considered average as of 2008. In 2005 a 200 GB harddisk cost US$100, [ 5 ] equivalent to $156 in 2023. As of April 2015, this is the maximum capacity of a fingernail-sized microSD card.
MiniCard (Miniature Card) (max 64 MB / 64 MiB) SmartMedia Card (SSFDC) (max 128 MB) (3.3 V,5 V) xD-Picture Card, xD-Picture Card Type M; Memory Stick, MagicGate Memory Stick (max 128 MB); Memory Stick Select, MagicGate Memory Stick Select ("Select" means: 2x128 MB with A/B switch) SecureMMC
The physical phenomena on which the device relies (such as spinning platters in a hard drive) will also impose limits; for instance, no spinning platter shipping in 2009 saturates SATA revision 2.0 (3 Gbit/s), so moving from this 3 Gbit/s interface to USB 3.0 at 4.8 Gbit/s for one spinning drive will result in no increase in realized transfer rate.
At the same show, SanDisk and Sony also announced a comparable Memory Stick XC variant with the same 2 TB [b] maximum as SDXC, [25] and Panasonic announced plans to produce 64 GB SDXC cards. [26] On March 6, Pretec introduced the first SDXC card, [27] a 32 GB card with a read/write speed of 400 Mbit/s.
In order to calculate the data transmission rate, one must multiply the transfer rate by the information channel width. For example, a data bus eight-bytes wide (64 bits) by definition transfers eight bytes in each transfer operation; at a transfer rate of 1 GT/s, the data rate would be 8 × 10 9 B /s, i.e. 8 GB/s, or approximately 7.45 GiB /s.
However, CF cards manufactured after the original Revision 1.0 specification are available in capacities up to 512 GB. While the current revision 6.0 works in [P]ATA mode, future revisions are expected to implement SATA mode. CompactFlash Revision 1.0 (1995), 8.3 MB/s (PIO mode 2), support for up to 128 GB storage space.