January 25, 2008 10:35 AM PST

PNY, Transcend flash cards move to 32GB

Correction January 27 7 p.m. PST: I messed up the photo-capacity math. A 32GB card can hold more than 10,000 3MB photos.

PNY's 32GB CompactFlash card should cost about $400 when it emerges in the second quarter of 2008.

(Credit: PNY)

Jumping the Photo Marketing Association trade show gun by a few days, PNY Technologies announced several new 16GB and 32GB flash cards for cameras and video cameras on Thursday.

The 32GB SDHC card can keep up with high-definition video captured at 9 megabits per second, the company said. And the Optima Pro CompactFlash card, has a 266X transfer speed, or 40 megabits per second, using a UDMA interface.

Both cards will be available in the second quarter. The SDHC card should cost about $250 and the CompactFlash card about $400, though the company cautioned prices could change given volatility in the flash memory chip market. PNY purchases its flash memory chips from Toshiba, Samsung, Intel, and others, the company said.

Capacity of 32GB may sound like overkill for digital photography--that's enough to hold more than 10,000 3MB images--but there are reasons it's useful. Raw files, especially newer 14-bit files, have moved well beyond 10MB apiece, shooting in combination with JPEG adds even more, and trigger-happy high-end cameras that shoot 5, 6.5, 9, and even 10.5 frames per second chew through memory in no time. And, of course, flash memory-based video cameras need all the capacity they can get.

Transcend's 32GB CompactFlash card

(Credit: Transcend)

PNY plans to show the cards at PMA along with new 8-inch and 10.2-inch digital photo frames and a 32GB USB flash drive, the company said.

Another company that's taking on better-known flash card brands such as SanDisk and Lexar is Transcend. It announced a 133X 32GB flash card earlier this month that includes support for ECC (error-correcting code) that can catch and fix some errors that sometimes occur when reading and writing data.

The Transcend card also supports UDMA access. (UDMA lets cameras write to a memory card faster, but only newer and higher-end cameras include the feature right now.)

Recent posts from Underexposed
Microsoft, Nikon sign patent-sharing deal
Canon wises up with 50D sensor and new zoom
Got $18,000? Grab a Hasselblad camera while it's cheap
Adobe hopes Lightroom intercepts photo trends
Smithsonian adds photos to Flickr Commons
Add a Comment (Log in or register) 2 comments
typo
by michael77878 January 27, 2008 12:48 PM PST
minor typo mistake. should be 10,000 3MB not 3GB
Reply to this comment View reply
Powered by Jive Software
advertisement

About Underexposed

This blog sheds light on digital photography, science, and open-source software. Shankland joined CNET News in 1998, after a five-year stint as a science writer. He's a lab rat who grew up in Los Alamos, N.M., and graduated from Harvard.

Contact Stephen at Stephen.Shankland@cnet.com

Add this feed to your online news reader

Underexposed topics

Stuff I'm reading

Latest tech news headlines

Featured blogs

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right