Kodak 64 MB CompactFlash Picture Card
Details
- Availability:
- No longer available through SilverGelatin.net
- List Price:
- $38.99
- Average Customer Rating:
- 4.5 out of 5
- Manufacturer:
- Kodak
Features
- 64 MB Type I CompactFlash card
- For use with digital cameras, PDAs, MP3 players, and other devices
- ATA compatible--can be used with PCMCIA adapter card, not included
Description
Kodak offers a 48MB Picture Card for DC25/DC120/DC210/ DC210P/DC220/DC240. Dramatically increase your storage capacity with this newly Picture Cards make it easy to expand the memory of your digital camera, laptop computer or a variety of systems and devices with PCMCIA Type I or Type II slots. Picture Cards can store, share and manipulate files as you would on a hard or floppy disk. They are removable and reusable!
Spotlight customer reviews
No problem here
[ Posted: 2003-06-15 ]
Decent price. Holds many pictures. Respectable industry name. A winner.
Not Worth the Price Premium
[ Posted: 2001-03-21 ]
This card works fine, but here is the bitter truth.
The core of all the cards (known in technical terms as the "controller") are made by only a few DRAM manufacturers. Those handful of DRAM manufacturers then sell the "controllers" to the major flash card manufacturers (i.e. SanDisk, Kodak, Olympus, and Viking). The flash card manufacturers then simply throw some plastic casings on the controllers, slap on a label, and ship the cards. As long as the flash card manufacturer is reputable, has a good warranty, and has been around for over 5 years; you will be just fine.
What I am trying to get at? I simply want to make it clear that you should not buy a card based solely on the fact it is made by Kodak. Check the pricing against the other major manufacturers (i.e. SanDisk, Viking, etc.) and then make your decision.
useful reliable memory cards
[ Posted: 2001-01-26 ]
I use this 64-meg memory card in my Kodak DC4800 camera, in my HP Handheld (660LX) computer, AND in my old Kodak DC50 camera also. (My handheld computer and DC50 camera both require an adapter.) Works great -- I have not encountered a single problem.
This card can hold about 65 pictures in the best-quality JPG format from my DC4800 camera. When shooting in the highest-quality mode (TIFF format), I can get only about 10 pictures on this card. For those times when I shoot in the TIFF mode, I bought the bigger 128meg Kodak card which holds twice as much.
I have a Digital Wallet 6-gig storage device onto which I download pictures from the chip when I'm on the road, and as should be expected - this Kodak card works fine there too.
These cards come pre-formatted for Windows but you can reformat them for Mac computers.
These great Kodak cards are reliable ...
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