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Next-gen PCMCIA: Expresscard

An anonymous reader writes "According to this article at WindowsForDevices, the PCMCIA trade association rolled out version 1.0 of its next-generation standard for modular mobile and desktop computer expansion at this week's Intel Developer Forum in San Jose, CA. Dubbed "ExpressCard", the new standard is "thinner, lighter, faster" than the group's previous PC Card standards, according to PCMCIA chairman Brad Saunders. ExpressCard achieves its space reduction by replacing the legacy parallel buses of the first and second generation PCMCIA card standards with state-of-the-art, high-speed serial connections, following a trend common in current computer system design."

7 of 168 comments (clear)

  1. Increased cost by afidel · · Score: 4, Informative

    To make cards any thinner that Type 1 PC-Card's you need to use chip's with special packaging as standard surface mount components on a dual sided PCB just barely fits into a PC Card enclose. For instance most CF or smaller WiFi cards are a radio on chip solution which is generally more expensive than a design based around discrete components (at least initially, if you can get the paramaters right and the process down then ultimatly the single chip solution is probably cheaper). For ram you need to use the highest density chips available which tend to be expensive instead of a small aray of cheaper, less dense chips.

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    There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
  2. Re:Instead of all this hooha by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 2, Informative

    1x? 16x? Sounds like you're talking of PCI-Express, not PCI-X (which is simply 64bit PCI over a 133MHz bus)

    I sense a name change in the near future.

  3. Not sure I need that by YouHaveSnail · · Score: 2, Informative

    "thinner, lighter, faster"

    Sounds good, but I just took a look at the handful of CardBus cards that I already own, and they're already plenty thin, plenty light, and plenty fast. I've never said to myself "Man, these CardBus cards are really weighing my bag down." They're already small enough that I often can't find them, and I really don't have a problem waiting the few seconds that it takes to transfer 128MB of digital photos to my PowerBook via a CardBus adapter.

    Frankly, I'd strongly prefer that industry stick to the current standard, and instead focus on coming up with nifty new CardBus products that add new capabilities to the computers I already have. Let's have a very affordable data acquisition card, for example. (I know data acquisition cards are already available, but AFAIK they tend to be pretty pricey.) Or a card that measures air quality wherever I am, or analyzes chemical samples.

    ExpressCard stinks to me of planned obsolescence.

  4. Re:Whats so great about serial? by Algan · · Score: 2, Informative

    Yes it is simpler. Simpler circuitry, although at much higher speed. Less components, thus lower costs. Less wires, thus lower cross-interference. Smaller size, easier to fit into smaller devices. None of these taken separately would be enough, but when you put them together they're hard to beat.

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    If con is the opposite of pro, is Congress the opposite of progress?
  5. Re:PCMCIA by diatonic · · Score: 2, Informative

    PCMCIA actually stands for 'Personal Computer Memory Card International Association'. The parent was just a joke.

  6. Re:Too little too late by RML · · Score: 2, Informative

    > Bitch and moan all you like, but can you hot-plug a usb mouse in a laptop running XFree and be able to use it immediately without quitting/restarting XFree and/or editing XF86Config? Thought so.

    I'm using Red Hat 9.0, and the answer is a definite "yes, I can". I can plug in a USB mouse and use either the mouse or the builtin trackpad of my laptop interchangably, without touching XF86Config. It works exactly like it does in Windows XP.

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    Human/Ranger/Zangband
  7. Re:... and fragile?! by bitflip · · Score: 2, Informative

    I call BS, at least for network adapters. I've replaced my Xircom dongle at Fry's.