News

Win! One of 10 Lexar Prize Packs Worth $287!

Gizmodo AU

Out of all the awesome prizes in the Lexar prize packs we’re giving away this week, I reckon the 16GB Firefly Jump Drive is the pick. And not just because it’s named after one of my favourite TV shows, either.


April 20, 2009
News

Win! One of 10 Lexar Prize Packs Worth $287!

Gizmodo AU

The world has changed. My first digital camera – a Cybershot P9 from Sony that shot 5MP stills and cost me $1,300 (right before the bottom fell out of the digital camera market) was state of the art for its time. Nowadays, both DSLRS and compacts are shooting HD video, 10MP stills and can chew through your memory faster than my old Cybershot chewed through its included 32MB memory stick. Fortunately, memory has also changed to adapt to the growing needs of the discerning photographer, with faster read and write speeds and higher capacities. And Giz AU has partnered with Lexar to offer readers the chance to win one of 10 high capacity storage prize packs.


February 3, 2009

Cake Decorator Takes Flash Drive Photograph a Bit Too Literally

Note to anyone buying a custom cake: Always print the picture you’d like recreated in frosting. Never just hand over a USB drive expecting things to work themselves out. [Cake Wrecks via The Raw Feed]


December 23, 2008

An Extensive, Obsessive Performance Test Of… USB Keys?

Test Freaks wrangled as many flash drives as they could and ran them through an oddly intense testing regime, finding out that your choice in USB stick brand may actually matter.


September 19, 2008

Eye-Fi Share Gets Lexar Branding

That Eye-Fi technology we were so gung ho about a few months back, the one which adds Wi-Fi to any digital camera, has found a new home in Lexar. The memory card giant is churning out a 2GB Shoot-n-Sync WiFi SD card that works exactly the same as the Eye-Fi Share. But with the Lexar branding, I guess these cards will be guaranteed a much larger audience. They’ll be available in October for $US99.


January 3, 2008

Crucial Announces Line of SSDs…Again

Crucial issued a press release today announcing their forthcoming line of Solid State Drives, but it appears to be the same news we covered in November. [Crucial]


July 16, 2007
Uncategorized

Among Many Fast SDHC Cards, Only One Is King of Speed

Review by Gizmodo contributor Curtis Walker SDHC, or Secure Digital High Capacity, finally lets SD break the 2GB barrier and compete with Compact Flash for capacity. Only a handful of new devices are compatible with SDHC, and there’s really no support for legacy gear. This means you can’t even put them into your computer’s SD card slot. You need a special reader which, most cards come with. As grim as that sounds, SDHC is a welcome step-up for people who have newer DSLR’s like Nikon’s D80 or video recorders like Canon’s high-def TX1. I entered nine of them into my own personal laptop-and-camera Battlemodo arena to determine compatibility and raw blistering speed.


May 7, 2007
Uncategorized

PMA 07: Lexar Flash all chromed up, and fast

Gizmodo AU

We had a sit down with the Lexar folks at PMA to catch up on their latest offerings, and picked up a few interesting tidbits you may not have known:

 

Their new 300x gear is FAST. 45MB/s fast. And Lexar was keen to point out they don’t play with “up to” rubbish either. They rate their cards based on minimum sustained speed ratings. Their pro cards come with Image Rescue 3, so you can recover lost/deleted images (and audio and video files) from memory cards of any brand using any reader. Nice. They also come bundled with Corel Paintshop Pro 10. Their thumb drives are all chromed and sexy. And the Mercury has an e-Ink usage meter that shows how much capacity is left.

 

A few more bits on their UDMA compatible readers after the jump.


April 23, 2007
Uncategorized

First Review: Lexar ExpressCard SSD

Lexar‘s ExpressCard solid state drive is an interesting proposition: 4 to 16 gigabytes of non-volatile memory in a slot form factor. That’s not only more storage than typical USB flash drives can offer, but more than most based on microdrives can, too. For those with lappies with ExpressCard slots, it would seem like a sweet piece of storage, and even as a cache for Vista’s ReadyBoost, since its not hanging off the side of a laptop like a USB thumbdrive would. So what’s the catch?

Unfortunately, I found write performance to be a lot lower than I’d have liked.

It read a fair 15MB per second on several machines, confirmed using both synthetic and MP3 file copies. But only wrote at 3MB per second.

For comparison, the laptop drive in the DV9000 HP Pavilion churned about 30MB per second in both reads and writes, and the Lexar Lightning, the fastest USB drive I had on hand, scored 17MB and 14MB per seconds in reads/writes.

In a nutshell, write speeds really need to be much better before I can recommend it.

galleryPost('lexarexpresscardssd', 7, 'Lexar ExpressCard SSD');–Brian Lam

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