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Flash Memory
Help Page
This page is designed to help you identify
the various types of flash memory cards available today...
What Is Flash Memory? Apply an
electrical charge to a cell in a memory chip and you change its state from 0 to
1 - or 1 to 0. Remove power from a typical memory chip and it forgets
the 0s and 1s. Not so with flash memory: It maintains the state of each cell
when the chip powers down. There are two downsides: Flash memory cards cost
more, and they are slower than traditional hard drives. Generally speaking, the
transfer rate of flash memory is about 1 MBps. New technologies and interfaces
can double or triple that rate, but you will pay extra for the convenience.
Either way, the slowest, cheapest DRAM chip used in your PC is vastly quicker
than the fastest flash memory chip available. That's why small hard drives live
on.
The market for flash memory cards evolved with the advent of digital cameras in
the mid-1990s. At the time, Sony Mavica cameras, which have floppy disk drives
in their back panels, were vastly preferred over those with proprietary serial
cables. But once cameras surpassed 1 megapixel, the need for smaller,
high-capacity, removable memory became clear.
Code,
Type,
Size (mm) |
Description |
SM
SmartMedia
30x23x1.3
 |
The first standards-based memory cards to
appear, SmartMedia units are about as thick as playing cards. But the deck is
stacked against the SmartMedia card, because it has the biggest footprint (about
2.7 square inches, compared with Secure Digital's 1.2 square inches), and its
flexibility makes it vulnerable to damage. It has no controller to let your PC
treat it as a standard hard drive, so you must pay extra for a PC Card adapter
(about $25). Also, some devices won't work with cards larger than about 16MB or
32MB.
SmartMedia's design limits it to 128MB. Fuji and Olympus used to be the biggest
backers of SmartMedia, but now they are making the transition to their own
format called xD-Picture Card. Expect to see few if any new devices using
SmartMedia.
Maximum capacity: 128MB. |
MMC
Multimedia card
45x37x0.76
 |
Along with SmartMedia, MMC was the other early
memory standard. It's less damage-prone because of its rigid plastic shell. It
has the same footprint and pin-out as its successor, the Secure Digital (SD)
card. MMCs fit in SD devices but not the other way around (because SD cards are
thicker). SD music players typically won't play audio from an MMC, because SD
players require encrypted music. Most companies are currently phasing out MMC
devices. MMC loyalists are backing a format called RS MMC, which is essentially
miniSD (see below) but half as thick; its fate is uncertain.
Current maximum capacity: 128MB. Projected capacity by 4Q 2004: MMC, 256MB; RS
MMC, 512MB. |
CF
Compact flash
43x35x5
 |
CF is the aging but far-from-dead flash memory
champion. More devices currently use CF than any other media type. Its future
likely lies in professional digital cameras that need massive capacity—4GB CF
cards are becoming available—and whose users don't mind the size of CF cards
(roughly half of a PC Card). Makers of consumer and advanced amateur cameras—led
by Kodak—are moving to smaller SD cards, but pros will stick with CF. Most CF
cards are Type II, which are as thick as PC Cards.
Current maximum
capacity: 4GB. Projected capacity by 4Q 2004: 8GB to 16GB. |
MS
Memory stick
51x20x2.5
 |
Sony created and supports the Memory Stick
format across its vast product line, and several other vendors offer Memory
Stick products as well. Memory Stick was introduced in 1999 and quickly grew
to constitute about a quarter of the flash memory market. The standard has
resulted in a confusing array of devices all called Memory Stick.
First, there is Memory Stick, which is limited to 128MB. It comes in regular and
OpenMG (Magic Gate) versions; only the latter can handle audio files. A tinier
version, Memory Stick Duo, is currently used in cell phones, and there are plans
to include compatibility with digital cameras and music players. The Memory
Stick Duo is only a bit smaller than an SD card.
To address the limited capacity of Memory Stick, Sony offers a bank-switched
Memory Stick with Memory Select, two banks of 128MB you access by flipping a
switch. To reach beyond 128MB of contiguous memory, Sony offers Memory Stick
Pro—now at 1GB—but it's generally not backward-compatible, even though it
physically fits in the Memory Stick slots of older devices. (Every kind of
Memory Stick works in a Memory Stick Pro slot, directly or with an adapter.)
If you live in an all-Sony world, the convenience is outstanding: You can
off-load video clips and stills from a Sony DV camcorder and show them on a Sony
TV or carry them on a Sony Clié handheld.
Maximum capacity: original, Duo, 128MB; Select, 256MB; Pro, 1GB. Projected
capacity by 4Q 2004: Duo, 512MB; Pro, 2GB. |
SD
secure digital
30x23x1.8
 |
Secure Digital has the broadest support and
brightest future. The cards are very small, however, so they're easy to lose.
For audio buffs, the biggest drawback is that SD players, like Memory Stick
players, require you to check out music from your PC, and the conversion process
can be slow.
SD is second only to CF in capacity, with projections of 16GB by the end of
2005. A number of notebooks have added dedicated SD slots as well. An even
smaller miniSD card is also available, primarily for use in cell phones, with
cameras and music players coming later. Stick it in an adapter and it fits in
any SD slot.
Maximum capacity: 512MB; miniSD, 256MB. Projected capacity by 4Q 2004:
2GB; miniSD, 512MB. |
XD
25x20x1.7
 |
Camera makers Fuji and Olympus have gone from
the bulkiest memory card standard, SmartMedia, to the smallest, XD. XD-Picture
Cards do not have controllers, which adds to the cost of a PC Card adapter, but
they offer faster read and write times. XD is unlikely to surpass SD sales or to
have the broad cross-device support of SD or Memory Stick, but Olympus is a
major player in digital photography. If your interests lie only with digital
photography, there's no downside to xD other than capacities currently lower
than CF and SD.
Maximum capacity: 512MB. Projected capacity by 4Q 2004: 1GB.
|
MD
Microdrive
43x35x5
 |
This is actually a
hard drive (rather than Flash Memory), having same dimensions as
CF Compact Flash
memory, so it can be used in CF slots. |
|