Log in

View Full Version : Sandisk Unveils 8 GB Ultra III CompactFlash Card


Jason Dunn
03-01-2006, 11:55 PM
<div class='os_post_top_link'><a href='http://www.dpreview.com/news/0602/06022614sandiskextreme.asp' target='_blank'>http://www.dpreview.com/news/0602/06022614sandiskextreme.asp</a><br /><br /></div><i>"SanDisk® Corporation (NASDAQ:SNDK) today announced the addition of new card capacities to its Extreme III line of flash cards for professional digital cameras that are double the highest capacity points currently available. The new cards include the 8-gigabyte (GB)1 CompactFlash®, 2GB SD™ and 2GB Memory Stick PRO Duo™ digital film cards. The announcement was made at the Photo Marketing Association trade show where SanDisk is demonstrating products in booth #2741. SanDisk Extreme III CompactFlash and SD cards have minimum write and read speeds of 20 megabytes per second (MB/sec.) Memory Stick PRO Duo cards have minimum write and read speeds of 18 MB/sec. 2 The SanDisk Extreme III cards, which range in capacity between 1- and 8GB are among the world’s fastest working cards in many of today’s leading digital single lens reflex (SLR) cameras."</i><br /><br />8 GB? Man, it seems like <a href="http://www.digitalmediathoughts.com/articles.php?action=expand,6575">I was just being wowed over 4 GB</a> and already we have a high-speed card that's double the capacity. It's funny, my 4GB Kingston card is so big I have yet to run out of space on it, even after days of shooting. I won't say that there's such thing as too much space, because when I start shooting more in RAW I'll likely chew up my 4GB card pretty quickly, but there's certainly an inflection point where for the average consumer, they have enough storage to last them months and months of shooting. In fact, the more storage a user gets, often the less frequently they dump the card to their PC. That, in turn, increases the risk of them losing their pictures if they only have them in one location (versus a PC that's being backed up).

bcre8v2
03-02-2006, 01:22 AM
8O

8 GB... I could fill that with 2 hours of 640 x 480 @ 30 fps video! :infinity:

sdrosenthal
03-02-2006, 04:00 AM
I tend to fill up 2GB in a days worth of shooting in RAW with my 20D. 8GB seems nice, but I think I would rather have either 4 2GB cards, or 2 4GB cards just in case one card does fail. Although if I win the lottery and am able to get the 16 megapixel 1D, well I may just change my mind and want a couple of 8GB cards... :P

Bob12
03-02-2006, 02:01 PM
Even though I have a significant amount of storage in my two most used cameras (7GB in the EOS-1D MkII and 4gb in the Pro 1), I've made a habit of transferring the pictures to computer at the end of each day's shooting. At home it's to a desktop and, and on the road, it's to a notebook. They are then copied to external drives at home at my earliest convenience.

Damion Chaplin
03-02-2006, 03:38 PM
...for the average consumer, they have enough storage to last them months and months of shooting. In fact, the more storage a user gets, often the less frequently they dump the card to their PC. ...

Very true. My mother (who's a professional photographer, unlike me) told me recently of a man she saw at a party who's daughter had been married a month or so previously. He said "Would you like to see the pictures?" and prompty whipped out his camera, scootched up next to her and started showing her a slide show on the 1.5" LCD. Turns out he doesn't have a computer. 8O He just keeps the photos he takes on the camera! I suppose he'll run out and buy a new card when the one he bought with the camera fills up...