Posted on 2008 under Storage, Design, USB Devices |
24
Apr

We never get bored of the tons of USB flash drives that come past our way here. They come in tons of shapes and sizes with various capacities. This latest comes from Imation and is named the Atom Flash Drive. The Atom is a tiny thumbdrive which is about the size of a paper clip and measures 30.5 x 13 x 5.6mm in size. Capacities for the Atom range from 1GB all the way up to 8GB which is a fairly decent size considering how tiny the thing is.
On the technical side the drive is embedded with SIP (System in Package) which uses Read more… »
Posted on 2008 under Storage, Miscellaneous |
14
Apr

Now that you’re already penning a purchase requisition for one of those fancy new P2 HD camcorders, you might as well toss a couple of Panny’s new 64GB P2 cards (model AJ-P2C064) and its AJ-PCD35 ExpressCard adapter on there, too. Yep, Panasonic has chosen NAB Show 2008 to double up on its current 32GB P2 card and to introduce a five-slot P2 memory drive with an ExpressCard interface. Put simply, the latter can hold all five cards from a fully-loaded VariCam 2700 / 3700 camcorder (or any other P2 rig) and give users the ability to upload content on the go with their ExpressCard-equipped laptop. Regrettably, Read more… »
Posted on 2008 under Storage, Miscellaneous, USB Devices |
25
Mar

Here’s a weird USB thumb drive called Cellink T from Korea’s Human C&C which looks like a normal thumb drive at first, but flips out into a two-pronged cellphone connector. One of the ports still goes into your computer’s USB drive, naturally, while the other slides into a cellphone (Korean, naturally) in order to transfer files or charge the battery. There’s actually a microSD card reader in there too, which makes the whole package even more convenient to carry around for grabbing stuff off your phone.
[Aving]
Posted on 2008 under Digital News, Storage, Miscellaneous |
22
Mar

The alphabet soup of different flash memory technologies is already a little bewildering, but it looks like the latest entrant could end up being the most promising of all, with single chip storage capacities of 1TB expected within ten years. Called array-based memory, the tech has been under development at a company called Nanochip, Inc. for nearly 12 years, and it looks like the first working samples will go out next year. Although those first prototypes will have storage roughly equivalent to NAND flash at tens of gigs per circuit, the plan is to rapidly scale up to 100s of gigs and finally to 1TB on a single chip. Because the chips can be manufactured using conventional fabs and aren’t subject to the same manufacturing constraints as traditional flash, they may also end up being far cheaper per gigabyte. The company Read more… »

Sony’s latest additions to its E series range of MP3 players come with interchangeable jackets, and have a USB plug for direct connection to your computer. The player itself comes in black or white, and there are twenty different designs of the outer “Style-Up” panels available. In 1GB, 2GB and 4GB versions, the NW-E023F, -025F and -026F play ATRAC, MP3, WMA and AAC and have a 3-line LCD display and FM radio function. Measuring 3.2 x 0.9 x 0.6 inches, they’re out in March in Japan for between $100 and $150. Style-Up jackets will be around $12 each.
Posted on 2008 under Storage |
2
Jan

Lenovo long ago revealed its Olympic-themed laptops, but it looks like the company isn’t done with the technology tie-ins just yet, as it’s now trotted out a similarly-branded USB flash drive to go along with the laptops (or your own). As you can see, the thumb drive should at least match the laptop quite nicely, but there unfortunately doesn’t seem to be any word as to what capacities will be available, or any other details for that matter. We’re pretty sure you can expect them to roll out sometime before the Olympics get underway this summer, however, with ‘em likely to demand a bit of a premium over other, non-Olympic drives.
Posted on 2007 under Concept, Storage, Design, Miscellaneous |
27
Dec

Panasonic has announced their development of the world’s thinnest internal Blu-ray drive. At just 9.5 mm tall, it’s thin enough for laptops but still packs a performance punch. We’re talking 2X recording for both BD-R and BD-RE (rewritable) discs, along with BD-R DL support (but we’re guessing that the dual layer writing is just 1X…have fun burning those 50GB discs). The drive also supports DVDs with 8x burning on all types of discs. It’s priceless for now with Panasonic only shipping units to manufacturers at the moment, but we’ll get more details soon when it’s on display at CES.