If you own an iPad and a DSLR, it's likely that you have already sprung for Apple's camera connection kit. And if your camera uses compact flash cards, then it is equally likely you own a card reader.
Here's a DIY project for the digital photography and fresher breath enthusiast, guaranteeing mintier kisses and fast transfer speeds. Take your favorite DIY gadget container—an Altoids tin—and make ...
[Roberto Barrios] has a Korg Triton sampling keyboard which he enjoys very much, but has grown tired of using media of yesteryear to store his work. He had the option of floppy disk or Jazz drive and ...
Page 2: The Card, 15-in-1 Reader and Our Test System Page 3: Performance and Conclusion No question about it, Flash Memory devices have taken on the Consumer Tech industry by storm. Flash memory is ...
Kanguru Solutions has rolled a Compact Flash card reader and USB flash drive into one unit: the KanguruMicro CF. The device also works as a IBM MicroDrive reader. The KanguruMicro CF, which is small ...
Once a parent company of Cirrus Logic, and later gobbled up by the Micron machine, Lexar Media as its now known is a top tier provider of NAND flash based products ranging from USB flash drives to ...
My Canon G3 all of a sudden is puking when it tries to read my 256 meg CF card. It reads my wussy 32 megger no problem, so it's definitely the card. I do have a USB Media Reader drive thing for my PC ...
Apple’s official Camera Connection Kit for iPad is pretty accommodating when it comes to sucking photos out of your digicam and into your iPad. Using the array of dongles, you can either suck content ...
A new driver for MicroTech's Zio, a USB flash card reader that requires no external power, is the cause of kernel panics when some systems are waking from sleep. One poster on Apple's discussion ...
As we discovered in our review of the iPad 2, the new iMovie for iPad app turns the iOS slate into quite the portable video editing studio (you can see a demo of quite how easy it is after the cut).
The 1990's were a time of innovation. CERN laid out the plans for the World Wide Web, Intel launched its Pentium processor, Digital SLR cameras made their first appearance and a company still in its ...