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Cameras, CES 2008

Wi-Fi Memory Card Makes Any Camera Wireless


Convenience is the name of the game if you plan on using one of Lexar's new wireless SD (Secure Digitalo) memory cards in your digital camera later this year. The new SD card, announced at the Consumer Electronics Show this week, is Wi-Fi capable, using a technology developed by a company called Eye-Fi to wirelessly transfer images from the card to your computer, a photo-sharing Web site or a retail kiosk. Eye-Fi released its own card late last year, but Lexar is the first company we've seen that's using the Eye-Fi technology in one of its own cards.

While some digital still cameras are starting to have wireless capabilities themselves -- Panasonic, for example, announced a Wi-Fi capable camera earlier this week -- most consumers own digicams that don't have this very convenient feature. This wireless SD card essentially turns any compatible camera into a wireless device.

After taking pictures, you go to within range of an open wireless, or Wi-Fi, hotspot, and your photos are automatically uploaded to your computer or to photo sharing Web sites such as Kodak Gallery, Wal-Mart Digital Photo Center, Shutterfly, Snapfish, Picasa, flickr and Facebook. Your computer doesn't even need to be turned on for the process to work.

No word on pricing or availability yet. We've been playing around with the Eye-Fi for a couple of weeks. When we've managed to get it to work, we love it, but as with all things Wi-Fi, it can be temperamental. Still, it beats having to carry a memory card adapter or USB cord around all day.

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Audio/Video, Cell Phones, Advice, BlackBerry, TV, iPhone

Turn Your BlackBerry Into an iPhone


By the end of this year, the iPhone won't be the only smart phone with a Nano's worth of memory (8-gigabyte, which holds about 1,000 songs and a couple of movies).That's because SanDisk plans to launch 8-gigabyte (GB) microSD High Capacity (microSDHC) memory cards by the end of the year.

This means phones such as the BlackBerry Curve, the BlackBerry 8800, and the Pearl will be expandable to 8GB, and, presumably, more as the memory card sizes increase (the maximum memory card size on the market right now is 4GB). Right now, just a few phones have the capability to accept these high capacity cards, but the situation should improve by the end of the year.

So, if you purchased a Curve or a Pearl, you don't need to kick yourself in the pants for not having waited for the iPhone. Chances are that the sizes of microSD memory will grow as quickly, if not faster, than the sizes of the iPhone's internal memory.

From SanDisk.



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