I have read a number of reviews covering the various flavors of microdrives and felt I needed to add my own, but in a positive light. I only own 1 digital camera, a Canon Powershot S40, but have 3 of the 1gb CF sized drives. The #1 reason why I finally...
Pros: Very small size that packs a lot of memory for digital photos. Cons: Altitude problem, battery drainer, slower than static memory.
INTRODUCTION
I own a 340MB IBM Microdrive for about 3 years now, and so far it had served me well. It seems like I could go on and on taking lots of high resolution photos without any fear of running out of memory anytime. The only...
Pros: Storage Size, Cost Cons: Eat Up Battery, possible data loss if dropped
I had been thinking that a digital camera will be a great tool for me to learn photography, because experimentation on it is free. When I go on a photo shooting trips, I can shoot as much as possible without worrying running out of space. But that...
Pros: Very small, very versatile, IBM continues a trend in top-quality HD's Cons: This little thing chews up batteries!
I got the IBM 1 GB Microdrive to use with my Canon G1 Digital camera. What a good decision. This thing is easier to use than I thought, and really is a delight.
The package brings with it the driver support, although most current computers...
Pros: tiny unit, yet massive storage capabilities Cons: power hungry and frail
in late 2000, ibm unveiled their largest smallest hard drive to the public. the largest smallest? that's right, the ibm microdrive is slightly larger than the size of a quarter, yet is capable of holding 1 gigabyte of space. the microdrive was widely...
Pros: Massive Storage Capacity, Fast Transfers, Great Warranty Cons: Power Consumption
Brief History and Comments about the manufacturer.
Every year, a plethora of new products enter the US marketplace and buyers are one again awed by the amazing breakthroughs in technological advancements. The IBM Microdrive (the 1GB model...
Pros: small, fast, and reliable Cons: you might lose it
This review is specifically going to talk about using the IBM MicroDrive in the 340 MB and 1 GB flavor on the as new Casio Cassiopeia E-125. The E-125 has 32 MB of RAM on it but of course, size definitely matters when your...
Pros: Amazing storage for the size Cons: Uses more power than regular flash cards
The IBM Microdrive is probably the most important technology that you've never heard of. As handheld devices and cameras increase in importance and capabilities, larger and larger storage will be required; while you may not have already heard about it...
Pros: Small, Fast, Reliable, Capacity Cons: Adds 2 seconds to the start up time of my digital camera
I have a 340MB Microdrive and I use it primarily with my digital camera. It is the killer add on you are looking for if you have a camera or mp3 player that accepts it, or a good way to transfer files if you have more than one laptop.
Use a microdrive only when you can afford to lose its contents by wupi ,Mar 02 '05
Pros: cheap Cons: not reliable.
I learned it the hard way.
After shooting a full gigabyte of photos stored on a microdrive only to find the drive failed when I tried to transfer the data from the camera to PC. The whole giga byte of photo was worthless.
Microdrive is not as reliable as compact flash because it has mechanical parts that are bound to fail, sooner or later. So, learn from others' failure and avoid your own. Use a microdrive only when you can afford to lose your work.
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