Faster SD cards could reach devices next year

By Agam Shah, IDG News Service |  Storage, memory Add a new comment

Memory cards based on a new specification will boost storage of consumer electronics to as much as 2TB, the SD Association said Thursday.

Secure Digital memory cards based on the new SDXC (extended capacity) specification could be out as early as next year with a capacity of 64GB, with 2TB available at some future point, said Kevin Schader, director of communications at the SDA.

The SDXC specification was announced in January, but the SDA couldn't then provide a time frame for the release of products. The specification was released to SDA member companies in April, Schader said.

Companies including Panasonic have announced plans to develop memory cards based on the new specification. The SD Association has about 1,100 member companies, including Toshiba and SanDisk, involved in the design, manufacture and sale of products using SD technology.

SD cards can be slotted into consumer electronics devices to store images, video or other data. The new specification will replace SD slots and media based on the older SDHC specification commonly used in devices.

Memory cards in multiple sizes and capacity based on the SDHC specification, including the miniSD and microSD formats, are commonly used removable memory in mobile phones. Apple earlier this week said it would add SD card slots to new MacBook Pro laptops due for release later this year.

The SDXC specification upgrades the storage capacity and cuts the data-transfer bottlenecks that plagued earlier specifications. It calls for data transfers between SDXC slots and media at 104MB per second, quadrupling current speeds. That could reach up to 300MB per second in the future, Schader said.

Initial slots and media based on the new specification could reach data transfer rates of 52MB per second, Schader said, adding that consumers can expect that to improve in the future. He couldn't predict when storage capacities of SD cards would hit 2TB. SD cards today have 32GB of storage capacity.

The new slots will be backward compatible and support older SD media, he said. However, older SD slots will not support new media.

    Add a comment

    Post a comment using one of these accounts
    Or join now
    At least 6 characters

    Note: Comment will appear soon after you have activated your account.
    Obscene/spam comments will be removed and accounts suspended.
    The information you submit is subject to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.

    ITworld LIVE

    StorageWhite Papers & Webcasts

    White Paper

    ESG ~ HP StoreOnce: the Next Wave of Data Deduplication

    Leveraging deduplication in backup environments yields significant advantages. The cost savings in reducing disk capacity requirements change the economics of disk-based backup. For some organizations, it allows disk-based backup-and, importantly, recovery-to be extended to additional workloads in the environment. For others, deduplication makes it possible to introduce disk-based backup where it may not have been feasible before.

    White Paper

    Evaluator Group: Storage Federation - IT Without Limits (Analysis of HP Peer Motion with Storage Federation)

    As the role of IT increases within organizations, the need to move data when and where it is needed is critical to support emerging business requirements. This has become increasingly difficult due to the huge growth of data volumes. This white paper sponsored by HP + Intel evaluates a solution that aims to enable the movement of data without physical limitations. Read now and see how this could enable agility and efficiency.

    White Paper

    HP Converged Storage Sets the Stage for the Next Era of Computing

    Enterprise storage has undergone many changes in recent years - with converged storage and infrastructure 2.0 paving the way for reduced IT infrastructure costs and greater performance. This report discusses the latest trends that are setting the stage for the next era of computing. Learn about the new infrastructure and storage trends that are changing the way business storage works today.

    White Paper

    AppAssure vs Acronis

    In this study of data protection for environments with virtual and physical servers running Windows, openBench Labs tested AppAssure Backup and Replication software v 4.7 and Acronis Backup & Recovery 11. Both solutions utilize block-based technology to unify data protection operations.

    White Paper

    Guaranteeing 100% Backup Recovery

    The single biggest challenge for IT personnel involved in the data protection process is making sure that their backups are recoverable every time. Management and users won't remember the ninety-nine successful recoveries but they will always remember the one failure.

    See more White Papers | Webcasts

    Ask a question

    Ask a Question