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USB Drives

Of all the myriad formats available, the USB Flash Drive is by far the most exciting, far reaching implementation of Flash Memory in the portable storage arena. Available in a wide variety of capacities, and infinite possibilities when it comes to physical form factor, the USB Drive combines all the best features of a DVD-R and a portable hard disk, in a tiny, easy to carry, highly robust package. Companies are constantly finding new applications for this technology, from software distribution to marketing presentations to security keys. And FlashRite, with our state-of-the-art equipment, engineering expertise and huge production capacity is the ideal partner to bring your ideas to production.

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Compact Flash (CF)

Compact Flash (CF) is the original removable flash memory specification. At 3.3mm thickness (Type 1) and 5mm thickness (Type II) a form factor dictated by the preceding PCMCIA standard, CF is substantially larger than the more modern Flash Storage Card specifications. Nonetheless, CF is still a robust format, in use in kiosk applications, various hardware and medical devices and some consumer electronics. FlashRite both supports CF duplication and supplies CF media.

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Secure Digital (SD)

Secure Digital (SD) is a Flash Memory card format developed by Matsushita, SanDisk® and Toshiba in 2000, for use in portable devices such as digital cameras, handheld computers, PDAs and GPS units. Today, SD card capacities range from 8 MB to 16 GB. Several companies have announced SD cards with 32 GB. Cards with 4-32 GB are considered high-capacity and conform to the newer SDHC specification. Physically, SD cards are based on the earlier Multi Media Card (MMC) standard, but are designed in such a manner that they cannot be inserted upside down, and tend to be somewhat thicker than the MMC standard.

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microSD

The mini SD card was announced in 2003 by SanDisk as a physically smaller format for the SD Specification. An even smaller form factor, the Micro SD Card followed, primarily in response to demand from the wireless telephone industry. FlashRite offers extensive support and capacity for all Secure Digital formats, including product selection, sourcing, duplication, labeling and packaging

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Solid State Drives (SSD)

A solid state drive (SSD) is a data storage device that uses solid-state Memory to store persistent data. An SSD emulates a hard disk drive, thus easily replacing it in any application. The original usage of the term solid state refers to the use of semiconductor devices rather than electron tubes, but has in this context been adopted to distinguish solid-state electronics from electro- mechanical devices as well. With no moving parts, a solid state drive is more robust, effectively eliminating the risk of mechanical failure, silent, and enjoys reduced seek time and latency by removing mechanical delays associated with hard disk drives.

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