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PCMCIA Announces NEWCARD Format

schnoz writes "Found this over at DPReview: "The PCMCIA technology association has today announced the 'NEWCARD' format. This new format makes use of PC Card, PCI Express and USB 2.0 technologies. The NEWCARD format is also aimed at both Mobile and Desktop PCs". Check out the rest of the article here."

3 of 184 comments (clear)

  1. It's not the size, but how you lose it by Kaz+Riprock · · Score: 5, Insightful


    No, that's not a typo. The picture shows how this thing is barely bigger than a pair of quarters edge-to-edge. Great. You know how often I lose change?

    There's a certain advantage to having small media/cards/devices. For example, having a 128 MB SD disk in my digicam is nice. I don't have to have a backpack to store more than 100 pictures at a time. But some of these things aren't even big enough to fit your initials on them, let alone some sort of recovery info if you *were* to lose what amounts to not much more in size than pocket lint.

    It's nice that I can take my entire mp3 collection anywhere I want to go in a thimble. That's a real advance in computer technology. But are these guys banking on the idea that I'll lose one out of every 10 to 20 of these things that I'll buy?

    I hope any NEWCARDs that I might need or buy come with a carrying case that's about as big as a floppy or CD. I'm still finding jelly beans, pen caps, and AA batteries under the furniture that have probably been there since Reagan was in office....oh..there's my entire work portfolio...

    --
    Mordor...a magical, mythical land where women are more rare than dragons--but where every man would rather find a dragon
  2. Re:A bit short on the info, long on the ass kissin by Dr.Enormous · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Never trust a press release that uses "leverage" as a verb three times in less than a page. Unless it's a press release about levers.

  3. Re:Why USB 2.0: such a slow standard? by g4dget · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Probably for the same reason why you aren't driving a Formula 1 race car to work: it's not necessary, and it's not cost effective.

    In different words, with PCI, they have communications at bus-speed covered for the few applications that need it. But for almost all PCMCIA applications (networks, modems, storage, etc.), USB 2.0 is already much faster than what is needed. And USB 2.0 is cheaper and more widely supported than any serial bus alternative.