**Preorder for 1st May** SanDisk Ultra UHS-I 64GB SDHC Memory Card £45.39 @ Play
I was trying to find a memory card for my new camera and came across this.
(I don't know much about memory cards but this did seem alright!!)
I hope this helps someone.
Blurb from site...Get the highest video performance with Class 10 rating for full HD video (1080p), plus more speed to catch the shot with your point and shoot camera. With SanDisk Ultra® UHS-I cards you'll benefit from faster downloads, higher capacity, and better performance to capture and store more Full HD video. Take advantage of ultra-fast read speeds of up to 30 MB/s to save time when moving images from the card to your computer. SanDisk Ultra memory cards are water-proof, temperature proof, X-ray proof, shock proof, compatible with all SD/SDHC digital devices, and come with world-class customer support.''


All Comments (4)
Jump to unread Post a CommentAlthough personally I would rather use several smaller cards as if you lose a card, camera goes faulty or the card goes faulty you may have lost a lot of photos or video.
How do I know? It happened to me. Had a lot of video on the card and the camera developed a fault which in turn screwed the card. Camera supplier replaced both camera and card with the greatest of apologies, but could not replace the hours of video taken on a holiday. Not the fault of the card. That taught me to use several smaller cards just in case for both the video and the camera. If taking still photo's you are going to have a hell of a lot of photos on there. Just my opinion.
Big is not always better.
If you're worried about losing everything from your card, do the sensible thing and back it up. The whole point of getting a card which has incredible transfer speeds is so you can transfer things quickly, therefore often.
Though one problem you do find with big memory cards is that you take pictures of simply anything and have to take ages trying to sort through them to just keep the worthwhile pictures, however, I think this happens on any sized card over, say 8gb.
Sandisk I think are a reliable enough company, faults mainly appear in unknown brands, and considering they even made it X-ray proof, I think it'll be able to go through hell before developing any problems.
If you're worried about losing everything from your card, do the sensible thing and back it up. The whole point of getting a card which has incredible transfer speeds is so you can transfer things quickly, therefore often.
Though one problem you do find with big memory cards is that you take pictures of simply anything and have to take ages trying to sort through them to just keep the worthwhile pictures, however, I think this happens on any sized card over, say 8gb.
Sandisk I think are a reliable enough company, faults mainly appear in unknown brands, and considering they even made it X-ray proof, I think it'll be able to go through hell before developing any problems.
I've purchased a Sony DSC-HX9, yet to be delivered, I think this will work on it..unless anyone can tell me other wise?
Thanks in advance