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    Articles about Memory Stick
    SanDisk Goes Extreme with Memory Stick PRO-HG Duo
    2008-05-30 11:51:00
    With Read and Write Speeds of 30 Megabytes per Second, the New SanDisk Extreme III Memory Stick PRO-HG Duo Optimizes Camera PerformanceSanDisk Corporation (NASDAQ: SNDK) today introduced the fastest card in its Memory Stick product family: the SanDisk Extreme® III Memory Stick PRO-HG Duo™ with read and write speeds of 30 megabytes (MB)1 per second. The card, available in June in 4-gigabyte (GB)1 and 8GB capacities, is ideal for professional photographers and advanced amateurs who use Sony digital single-lens reflex (SLR) cameras.SanDisk and Sony jointly developed Memory Stick PRO-HG Duo as an extension of the existing Memory Stick PRO format, to offer faster read and write speeds for PRO-HG capable Sony digital SLRs, point-and-shoot cameras and digital camcorders.SanDisk is unveiling the SanDisk Extreme III Memory Stick PRO-HG Duo at the PMA Australia 2008 Imaging Technology Show, where the company is exhibiting at Stand 401 in the Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre from May 30...
    By: DSLR CAMERAS ONLINE
     
    Sandisk 4GB M2 Memory Stick Micro (SDMSM2-4096) & BlueProton USB 2.0 Card Reader Writer newly tagged “cell phone”
    2008-05-11 02:05:43
    Sandisk 4GB M2 Memory Stick Micro (SDMSM2-4096) & BlueProton USB 2.0 Card Reader WriterBy BlueProton Buy new: $37.95 Customer Rating: First tagged “cell phone” by novacaine Customer tags: memory stick micro(3), cell [...]...
    By: Online Business Alliance & Niches
     
    Secure USB Memory Stick Hack
    2007-05-09 13:04:55
    Not everything that costs lots of money and comes in a velvet case is good quality. Sprites mods has a good article about hacking a “secure” USB memory stick. It seems that the manufacturer broke all the rules when attempting to implement security. “Seemingly, the checking of the password and the unlocking of the stick are two separate processes, both initiated from the PC. From the point of view of the stick, they’re both separate processes and unlocking can happen just fine if no valid password is entered. This is a Big Flaw. As an indication to how big: The best sticks handle all the encryption to/from the flash themselves and don’t keep a password at all: the fact that the data can’t be decrypted without it makes it safe. The mediocre sticks store a password inside the flash-controller and check it against a password sent by the PC before unlocking the flash-memory. This way, the password can’t be found by reading out the flash-chip maua...
    By: Hacked Gadgets
     
     
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