Toshiba has announced that it will be launching a range of SD storage cards equipped with Wireless B/G/N connectivity. The “FlashAir” range will have an 8GB SD card for use with Digital camera’s, ...
Toshiba has just launched two new products that will help photographers out greatly during photoshoots. The Japanese technology company has just announced two new SD cards, including the world’s first ...
Reverse engineering the Toshiba FlashAir SD storage card allowed a researcher to execute remote code – and could’ve allowed him to add other malicious or practical features. LAS VEGAS -Like many good ...
Eye-Fi's wireless cards push photos straight from digital cameras without cables, but what if you want to pull some pics back the other way? Toshiba's solving that problem with the two-way FlashAir, ...
Toshiba has launched the world's first SDHC memory card to feature built-in NFC (Near Field Communication). Unlike other wireless SD cards which make it easy to transfer images, the new NFC card has ...
If you want to use your smartphone or tablet to easily control the camera and share pictures on-the-go, you might need a Wi-Fi-enabled SD card. These SD cards are very similar to the normal ones ...
Toshiba on Monday announced a new family of Secure Digital (SD) memory cards that write data five times faster than its standard SD cards can. The High Speed SD Memory Cards from Toshiba America ...
Toshiba will launch high-speed SD memory cards this year in Japan and abroad that can read data at up to 95MB per second and write at 90MB per second. The Japanese company will launch the cards under ...
Toshiba Corp., a leading innovator in memory card solutions, today reinforced its line up of SD High Capacity (SDHC) cards with three new cards, including the worlds first 32-gigabyte (GB) memory card ...
Toshiba will soon launch the world’s fastest SD cards, which will offer write speeds of up to 240 megabytes per second (MBps). The Japanese electronics giant said Tuesday that its new Exceria Pro ...
TV and home video editor Ty Pendlebury joined CNET Australia in 2006, and moved to New York City to be a part of CNET in 2011. He tests, reviews and writes about the latest TVs and audio equipment.
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