View allAll Photos Tagged microsd

a.k.a. 'a place for everything'

 

this is the Scottevest (SeV) Quantum, a now-discontinued model that i've had for a few years. it's everything i'd hoped it would be, with a few minor exceptions. it's more water *resistant* than waterPROOF, and the fabric inside the pockets is a bit too flimsy. and the MetroCard window-pocket (#22) tends to snag on the clip of anything you might carry in your front-left pants pocket. other than that, great jacket. 28 pockets. and even as jam-packed with gear as it appears, it's still under-utilized.

 

if you ride the NYC subway system, you'll often hear "backpacks and other large containers are subject to random search by the police.." - this jacket is a great way to carry a backpack's worth of stuff around, without getting hassled by the man.

 

now that the weather's getting warmer, i don't wear this as often. it has zipper vents on the sides but those things don't help enough, especially when there's no breeze. rather than remove everything & transfer it to something else, i can roll up the jacket (minus the D5000) and carry it in the top of my messenger bag (part 3). AND, when entering the subway system, there's still room in the back pocket of the jacket to fold up the messenger bag and stuff it inside. very versatile.

 

-

 

1. Sony AM/FM Walkman, spare AAA battery, BlackBerry wired headset

over the past decade, two major events have occurred in NYC: 9/11 and the Northeast Blackout of 2003. during both of those events, the most reliable method of finding out WTF was going on was AM radio. so this little guy is always with me, tuned to 1010WINS. the BB headset can plug into the BB or the walkman.

 

2. Passport and Moleskine

the most widely accepted form of photo ID, and a moleskine for notes, musings, and tiny paper airplanes.

 

3. Big Red chewing gum

i like fresh breath and cinnamon. and i despise and distrust sugar substitutes.

 

*UPDATE*

Aspartame?!?!? Really??? OK Big Red is officially out of the rotation. And now i need a new gum.

 

4. mini Bic lighter

more convenient and more reliable than the peanut lighter i've long considered buying.

 

5. Cables and Adapters

- USB > Mini USB cable

- Mini USB > Micro USB adapter

- 1/8" male > RCA female adapter

- 1/8" male > dual 1/8" female adapter

- 1/8" stereo coupler

- 1/8" male > RCA male cable

- 1/8" male > 2.5mm male cable

- 1/4" male > 1/8" female adapter

 

with these i can plug anything into anything.

the mini USB works w/ the Rikiki (#18) and the Zen (#9), the micro USB can dock and/or recharge the BB.

 

6. Panasonic Lumix TS1

my favorite do-everything camera.

 

7. Nikon D5000 w/ 35mm f/1.8 lens

when a P&S just won't do justice to the image. kept inside a UPS 2nd Day Air Pak, which is made out of some sort of very strong, definitely waterproof polymer.

 

8. spare AA batteries

for the 4Sevens Quark AA2.

 

9. Creative Zen 16GB, Sennheiser HD212 Pro headphones

my favorite MP3/video player. holds a charge forever, and has an SD slot so i can use it as an external HD, or (more importantly) a portable SD backup device. if one of the SD cards in the cameras is full, i can pop it into the Zen and import all the pics. it also has a voice recorder, in case i want/need to record a phonecall.

 

and the Sennheisers, i spent an hour @ J&R's 'wall of headphones' trying on everything they had. and these had the best sound of any unit under $200. plus i love that they're totally modular, i can unplug the wires from both earpieces for transport. before these i'd burned through two consecutive pairs of Sony MDR-V700DJs due to wire crimping. and crappy hinges.

 

10. SanDisk 2GB MicroSD card, MicroSD > SD adapter

backup card - sometimes it's empty, sometimes it stores videos for playing on the Zen, sometimes it's full of client files. 2GB worth of whatever i need.

 

11. Petzl Spirit carabiner, keys, 8GB Lacie Itsakey, 4GB SanDisk Cruzer Micro

finally found the load-bearing carabiner i've been looking for. made in the USA, no hard corners on the gate to snag, no paint to fleck off, and not monstrously huge. and the flash drives are still going strong.

 

12. six quarters

for vending machines and/or other POS devices that don't take bills.

 

13. Fisher 'Bullet' Space Pen

a.k.a. 'Fisher space pen refill carrying case'.

 

14. Dunlop Teckpick

an aluminum pick, really stiff with a big chunky/clangy sound. works well on a drop-tuned electric or a nylon-stringed acoustic. i wouldn't trust it near a 12-string.

 

15. $20 emergency cash

cab fare, meal, etc.

 

16. 1GB SanDisk MicroSD card

all my passwords and some personal files in an encrypted (160-bit Blowfish) .ace file. and a copy of winace.

 

17. BlackBerry Bold 9650

still my favorite phone, despite RIM's plunging market share.

 

18. Lacie Rikiki 500GB external hard drive

a very very good drive.

 

19. Lamy Swift Palladium

this pen looks and feels better than it writes. i used to love Lamy, don't know why the M66 refills suck. i should really swap it out with something else.

 

20. Black Sharpie (Fine), Silver Metallic Sharpie (Fine),

assorted zip ties, rubber bands, and twist ties

the black Sharpie is for writing on anything lighter than grey (#666666). the silver Sharpie is for writing on anything darker. the rest is for ad hoc cable management.

 

21. Petzl Spirit carabiner, Victorinox Cybertool 34

a 2nd carabiner and the do (almost) anything Cybertool.

 

22. MetroCard

this is for the subway, my home away from home.

and also some safety pins, just beside the card.

 

23. SureFire G2 LED, w/ spare 123A batteries

backup flashlight - another important lesson learned in the '03 blackout. i was in New Jersey when the power went out, and my light @ the time (inova x5) ran out of juice on the way back to the City. so now i always have a backup light and at least one set of spare batteries. it only has one output level: VERY BRIGHT. it's essentially bombproof, and the batteries have a ten year shelf life.

 

24. 'first aid' kit

latex exam gloves, alcohol swabs, cotton balls, q-tips, neosporin, paper towels. nothing too serious. but when my son gets a booboo (or touches ANYthing on the subway) i'm glad to have it.

 

25. book

whatever i'm reading at the time.

 

26. mini tripod

palm-sized and generic, but juuust sturdy enough to support the D5000 if i find myself desperate for a shake-free shot.

Since Schedulr seems like it's going to be a thing of the past, for Sunday afternoon I'll post a couple of product photos *and* a memento photo, the latter which of course were previously uploading Monday mornings. Going forward, I don't exactly know how I'll handle the loss of Schedulr yet, but most likely it'll be more photos less often, which is pretty much what everybody else does anyway. (Seriously, searching out Schedulr on flickr gave me a total of about four people using it in the past, and I think two or three of those people quit using it a while back)! The two O.B. Kroger photos yesterday were completely unplanned, but I figured if I don't have the ability to schedule uploads, might as well do some spur of the moment stuff from time to time :P

 

Anyway, on to the subject at hand: My local Southaven Office Depot always seems to be an amusing place to take photos at. While this 2011-dated shelf décor was seen and photographed a little over a year ago, pretty sure it was still there as of the beginning of this summer (2019). Present day an 8GB storage device would be considered sub-low end. Fast forward to 2019, and 1TB microSD cards can be found now (mind blown!), but those are still about $400!!

 

(Disclaimer: not making fun of anyone using small capacity stuff, since a lot of people don't even have the need to tote around 1GB. I use a 4GB flash drive at work, and that's really way too big for what I do there, but it was hard finding anything smaller even a couple of years ago)!

40 years evolution.

40 años de evolucion.

 

8.589.934.592 bytes vs. 8 bytes

 

1Gbyte = 1.024 Mbytes = 1.084.576 Kbytes = 1.073.741.824 bytes

1Mbyte = 1.024 Kbytes = 1.048.576

1Kbyte = 1.024 bytes

* Panasonic Lumix CM1 Phone

 

Key Photographic / Video Specifications:

 

20MP 1-inch CMOS sensor

3:2 native aspect ratio

Leica DC ELMARIT lens, 6 elements in 5 groups

F2.8 aperture

28mm equivalent focal length

ISO 100-25,600 (in extended ISO mode)

4K-video at 15fps

Raw capture

1.1MP front camera

 

Other Specifications:

4.7-inch 1080p display

Android 4.4

Qualcomm Snapdragon S801 quad-core processor

2GB RAM

16GB built-in memory

microSD cards up to 128GB

2600mAh batttery

Panasonic DMC-CM1 R2W SILKYPIX Developer Studio 8

 

* Panasonic Lumix CM1 Phone

 

Key Photographic / Video Specifications:

 

20MP 1-inch CMOS sensor

3:2 native aspect ratio

Leica DC ELMARIT lens, 6 elements in 5 groups

F2.8 aperture

28mm equivalent focal length

ISO 100-25,600 (in extended ISO mode)

4K-video at 15fps

Raw capture

1.1MP front camera

 

Other Specifications:

4.7-inch 1080p display

Android 4.4

Qualcomm Snapdragon S801 quad-core processor

2GB RAM

16GB built-in memory

microSD cards up to 128GB

2600mAh batttery

My bag:

VAUDE Omnis 26 grey

 

Here is the list of items that may be of interest (starting top left corner):

 

LEFT SIDE:

 

Sport shorts

 

Sport Shirt

 

Tasmanian Tiger Tac Pouch 5

 

charging Brick for Notebook (+cable)

 

micro usb + usb-c charging cable + QC-3 brick

 

Dell XPS 15 9570

 

hard-case for Logitech MX Master 2S (inside)

 

"bike citizen" silicone phone mount for bike

 

mountable lights for bike (front and rear)

 

Victorinox army knife/tool

 

simple bag for in-ear headphones (headphones = Jayfi JA40)

 

Keys + carabiner + small 16GB USB stick + Sonor Drum tuning tool

 

UGREEN tech-organizer hardcase

 

allroundo multi-cable (USB-C, Micro-USB, Lighting)

 

Samsung microSD to SD

 

SanDisk cruzer 16GB USB Stick

 

Blitzwolf Powerbank 5200mAh QC 3.0

 

Samsung Galaxy S9+ 256GB + Spigen tough armor case

 

Fossil leather wallet

 

orange bag (groceries)

 

RIGHT SIDE:

 

deodorant

 

sunglasses + hardcase

 

carhartt script Cap

 

tissues + painkillers + lipstuff

 

small notebook incl. pen

 

some of my pens + Staedler Pen Box (fineliner)

 

large refillable notebook (Staples arc system)

 

Starbucks coffee mug (600smth ml)

 

Camelbak Chute 1L water bottle

 

Greetings from Germany <3

The loveable BMO (Beemo) living video game console character from Adventure Time made out of lego. This is a fully functional portable Raspberry Pi Linux computer. This means it can do pretty much anything you can think of. Plays video, plays games, surfs the web, and more! Of course it cannot make toast, or skateboard like the real BMO...

 

Here is a short video: www.youtube.com/watch?v=RFhiCLS5fhg

 

Here are some details on the internal components:

* Raspberry Pi (Model B)

* 4Gb SD card with Raspbian Linux OS

* 2.5 " TFT display: www.adafruit.com/products/912

* Low-profile microSD card adapter:http://www.adafruit.com/products/966

* Micro-USB cable for power

* Mediasonic USB Battery Pack: www.mediasonic.ca/product.php?id=1359582548 (This sits outside of the BMO)

* A female USB connector and some wires (For the USB port on the front of the BMO). Check out this tutoral for more info on that: www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=40&t=32336

 

This will be on display at Brickcon this coming weekend (Oct 5-6).

Used gear:

GoPro Action Camera

 

UW Housing for dives deeper than 10m:

Underwater Housing

 

Including filters for perfect underwater color:

Diving Set incl. Filters

 

Handle:

GoPro Pole El Grande

 

Compatible MicroSD Card:

Sandisk Extreme Pro Micro SD Card

 

Best Editing Software:

Adobe Lightroom

 

NiklasFlindt © 2020, All Rights Reserved. Please, do not use without a permission!

 

Thanks for all visits, comments & Favs! :)

* Panasonic Lumix CM1 Phone

 

Key Photographic / Video Specifications:

 

20MP 1-inch CMOS sensor

3:2 native aspect ratio

Leica DC ELMARIT lens, 6 elements in 5 groups

F2.8 aperture

28mm equivalent focal length

ISO 100-25,600 (in extended ISO mode)

4K-video at 15fps

Raw capture

1.1MP front camera

 

Other Specifications:

4.7-inch 1080p display

Android 4.4

Qualcomm Snapdragon S801 quad-core processor

2GB RAM

16GB built-in memory

microSD cards up to 128GB

2600mAh batttery

Lionfish relaxing in Top of a Coral between hundrets of Prey fish

 

Used gear:

GoPro Action Camera

 

UW Housing for dives deeper than 10m:

Underwater Housing

 

Including filters for perfect underwater color:

Diving Set incl. Filters

 

Handle:

GoPro Pole El Grande

 

Compatible MicroSD Card:

Sandisk Extreme Pro Micro SD Card

 

Best Editing Software:

Adobe Lightroom

 

NiklasFlindt © 2015, All Rights Reserved. Please, do not use without a permission!

 

Thanks for all visits, comments & Favs! :)

The loveable BMO (Beemo) living video game console character from Adventure Time made out of lego. This is a fully functional portable Raspberry Pi Linux computer. This means it can do pretty much anything you can think of. Plays video, plays games, surfs the web, and more! Of course it cannot make toast, or skateboard like the real BMO...

 

Here is a short video: www.youtube.com/watch?v=RFhiCLS5fhg

 

Here are some details on the internal components:

* Raspberry Pi (Model B)

* 4Gb SD card with Raspbian Linux OS

* 2.5 " TFT display: www.adafruit.com/products/912

* Low-profile microSD card adapter:http://www.adafruit.com/products/966

* Micro-USB cable for power

* Mediasonic USB Battery Pack: www.mediasonic.ca/product.php?id=1359582548 (This sits outside of the BMO)

* A female USB connector and some wires (For the USB port on the front of the BMO). Check out this tutoral for more info on that: www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=40&t=32336

 

This will be on display at Brickcon this coming weekend (Oct 5-6).

* Panasonic Lumix CM1 Phone

 

Key Photographic / Video Specifications:

 

20MP 1-inch CMOS sensor

3:2 native aspect ratio

Leica DC ELMARIT lens, 6 elements in 5 groups

F2.8 aperture

28mm equivalent focal length

ISO 100-25,600 (in extended ISO mode)

4K-video at 15fps

Raw capture

1.1MP front camera

 

Other Specifications:

4.7-inch 1080p display

Android 4.4

Qualcomm Snapdragon S801 quad-core processor

2GB RAM

16GB built-in memory

microSD cards up to 128GB

2600mAh batttery

The loveable BMO (Beemo) living video game console character from Adventure Time made out of lego. This is a fully functional portable Raspberry Pi Linux computer. This means it can do pretty much anything you can think of. Plays video, plays games, surfs the web, and more! Of course it cannot make toast, or skateboard like the real BMO...

 

Here is a short video: www.youtube.com/watch?v=RFhiCLS5fhg

 

Here are some details on the internal components:

* Raspberry Pi (Model B)

* 4Gb SD card with Raspbian Linux OS

* 2.5 " TFT display: www.adafruit.com/products/912

* Low-profile microSD card adapter:http://www.adafruit.com/products/966

* Micro-USB cable for power

* Mediasonic USB Battery Pack: www.mediasonic.ca/product.php?id=1359582548 (This sits outside of the BMO)

* A female USB connector and some wires (For the USB port on the front of the BMO). Check out this tutoral for more info on that: www.raspberrypi.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=40&t=32336

 

This will be on display at Brickcon this coming weekend (Oct 5-6).

I recently obtained a *much* higher resolution X-Ray machine than the modified mailroom scanner I've been using until now. This one resolves details as small as about 10 or 20µm and produces stunningly good images with minimal effort on my part. In fact the most difficult part of producing this image was finding somewhere to plug in a USB flash drive so I could export the image!

 

The item in question is a 128GB Toshiba micro SDXC card. The microfocus tube makes it easy to adjust magnification by varying the position of the object relative to the detector; to give you an idea of the finesse you're seeing here, the six fine bond wires to the right of the 'fan' at the bottom are about 400µm (0.4mm) from top to bottom on the left size (and somewhat larger on the right side).

 

The maximum tube voltage on this unit is 'only' 35kV so it doesn't have the same sort of 'penetrating power' as the Scanmax mailroom X-Ray machine, so I'll almost certainly keep both for different applications.

 

I like hi-tech toys!

* edited w Luminar3 Aerial

* Panasonic Lumix CM1 Phone

 

Key Photographic / Video Specifications:

 

20MP 1-inch CMOS sensor

3:2 native aspect ratio

Leica DC ELMARIT lens, 6 elements in 5 groups

F2.8 aperture

28mm equivalent focal length

ISO 100-25,600 (in extended ISO mode)

4K-video at 15fps

Raw capture

1.1MP front camera

 

Other Specifications:

4.7-inch 1080p display

Android 4.4

Qualcomm Snapdragon S801 quad-core processor

2GB RAM

16GB built-in memory

microSD cards up to 128GB

2600mAh batttery

Day Bag

 

The point of this bag is to get me through the day. I usually have a bag or toolbox close by as well for generalized storage and quick cleanup, but mostly these bags are used for things that I rarely use or don't need all the time. The effect gives me places that I can drop off things that I'm not going to need, and leaves me to have only the essentials with me.

 

The size of this particular bag is nice because it's so limited, I can only really afford to carry things that I'm going to use. I might switch the psp for an ipod nano 5g if i'm planning on going to the park or the gym.

 

Having two smartphones allows me to keep both pretty clean and uncluttered. The Note is for calls, maps, evernote, and all things utility. The S3 is an alternative gaming machine, used for google hangouts, and is the device that I normally hand off when kids in the family want to play with my phone.

 

I also use hair ties for just about everything because they're a lot nicer than rubberbands to hold my stuff together. 22c in particular is where I hook my keys and waterbottle if I'm walking a ways. This is connected to the strap. The ones on the wallet hold a credit card in place, especially if I'm strapped for cash and I want to use one card over another.

 

Finally, I'll actually use my bluetooth headset. I'll initiate a tasker sequence using my pebble and dictate notes while driving, or if I'm just brainstorming and the words just won't come out on paper.

  

LEGEND

 

1 - STM Scout 2 iPad Shoulder Bag, Black

2a - Limeade L180X Battery (18,000 mAh), Matte Black

2b - Wallet Sized Battery of unknown capacity, Corporate branded. (Not Really Pictured)

2c - Limefuel L240X Battery (24,000 mAh), Gloss White (ALT) (Not Pictured)

2d - EasyAcc Powerbank (12,000 mAh), Black/Silver (ALT) (Not Pictured)

3 - PSP Go, Sparkley White, 16gb onboard, 2gb memory card

4 - Kindle 4 NT

5 - Keys with Flashlight, Car starter, Carabeener and Paracord keychain

6 - Marona, Men's bi-fold wallet with moneyclip and two generic hairbands

(These are useful).

7a - Samsung Galaxy Note 3 -- Primary Cellphone

7b - Samsung Galaxy S III -- Secondary Gaming Machine

7c - Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 -- Occasional Netflix (ALT) (Not Pictured)

8 - Inhaler

9 - Microusb cables(x2), PSP Go Usb Charging Cable (x1), Micro Microusb cable (x1)

10 - Skullcandy Ink'd 2 earbuds

11 - Android OTG Cable

12 - TP-Link TL-WR710N(US) Travel Router

13 - Generic Emerson Charger from something I think.

14 - Generic Looking WD Passport Bag (For Cable Storage)

15 - Pebble Smartwatch

16 - Gold Bond Ultimate Intensive Healing Hand Cream

17 - Leatherman Skeletool

18 - Altoids Tin

19 - 16gb Flash Drives, Microsd to USB converter device -- corporate branded

20 - Plantronics Marque 2

21 - Sony 32g MicroVault Smartphone flash drive

22 (a-c) - Various hairbands used for connecting things to other things or to themselves

23 - Staples Steno Book Notebook

24 - TUL Gel Pens

25 - Brita Sports Bottle (Not Pictured)

Bryan's EDC

 

- Sunglasses (Polarized)

- Mini Survival Kit (See ITS Tactical for contents)

- Sig Sauer P225/P6 w/ Spare Mag

- iPhone 3GS

- Emerson Commander

- TAD Gear Titanium Split Key Ring w/ Keys

----- TAD Gear Skull Key Cover

----- Kingston 2GB microSD Card w/ USB Reader

- Primary Wallet (Bosca Nappa Vitello Pocket Wallet)

----- Nemisis Knives Ti-Card Gen 2

----- Kevin Mitnick's Business Card Lock Pick Set

----- ITS Tactical Business Cards

- Secondary (Giveaway) Wallet

----- Used to giveaway in mugging situation (fake credit cards)

- Moleskine Cahier Notebook

- Parker Jotter Stainless Steel Pen

- Surefire A2 Aviator Flashlight

 

Used gear:

GoPro Action Camera

 

UW Housing for dives deeper than 10m:

Underwater Housing

 

Including filters for perfect underwater color:

Diving Set incl. Filters

 

Handle:

GoPro Pole El Grande

 

Compatible MicroSD Card:

Sandisk Extreme Pro Micro SD Card

 

Best Editing Software:

Adobe Lightroom

 

NiklasFlindt © 2015, All Rights Reserved. Please, do not use without a permission!

 

Thanks for all visits, comments & Favs! :)

Galaxy Note 7 pre-orders at T-Mobile to go live later today, get a free year of Netflix, a Gear Fit2, or a 256GB microSD card3

Panasonic Lumix CM1 Android Leica Camera Phone

Key Photographic / Video Specifications:

 

20MP 1-inch CMOS sensor

3:2 native aspect ratio

Leica DC ELMARIT lens, 6 elements in 5 groups

F2.8 aperture

28mm equivalent focal length

ISO 100-25,600 (in extended ISO mode)

4K-video at 15fps

Raw capture

1.1MP front camera

 

Other Specifications:

4.7-inch 1080p display

Android 4.4

Qualcomm Snapdragon S801 quad-core processor

2GB RAM

16GB built-in memory

microSD cards up to 128GB

2600mAh batttery

These have always fascinated me. This is my cart coming down to ground level tonight at the Monona Walmart. I had stopped on the way home from the office to buy a microSD card reader and stumbled into a number of Lego sets on clearance, including the lunar space station and lunar roving vehicle sets.

The least exciting gear photo on Flickr

 

I made this for myself, because I can never remember what I have. Now, the whole world knows.

 

I honestly thought I had more -- maybe I'm missing some?

Kích thước vòng bụng: 9,9 mm

Chạy trên hệ điều hành: Android 2.2 Froyo

Màn hình: 4 inch Super Clear LCD

Độ phân giải: 800 x 480 pixel nét căng, tích hợp bộ xử lý 1GHz

Camera: 3.2 Megapixel

Khe cắm thẻ nhớ microSD, công nghệ âm thanh nâng cao SoundAlive, Android Market và Samsung Apps…

  

280USD haha Can't cm, but u can tick a note :))

Raspberry Almond Roasted Bean to you too!

A future director!

 

Young girl from Sat Sat Yo village, a small village in the Nyaung Oo township, near Myanmar's ancient city of Bagan. The children in Sat Sat Yo are known for their ancient hairstyle known as Sanyitwine. Before colonial rule, all of the country's boys and girls wore their hair this way. Sat Sat Yo village is now the only place left in Myanmar where children still have their hair tied in this traditional style.

 

Before our trip Michael and I both picked up a Kodak Polaroid knowing or hoping we may have moments like this. The kids loved them and pretty much clicked through all our paper. Was pretty cool having backups saved to a microSD so they could keep the small paper prints and we got to keep the digital versions.

  

12 bytes core memory --> ... -->32Kbytes--> ... --> 2Mbytes --> 8 Gbytes

[trigésima primera semana]

 

Copyright © Jobsamuel Núñez.

All rights reserved.

* Panasonic Lumix CM1 Phone

 

Key Photographic / Video Specifications:

 

20MP 1-inch CMOS sensor

3:2 native aspect ratio

Leica DC ELMARIT lens, 6 elements in 5 groups

F2.8 aperture

28mm equivalent focal length

ISO 100-25,600 (in extended ISO mode)

4K-video at 15fps

Raw capture

1.1MP front camera

 

Other Specifications:

4.7-inch 1080p display

Android 4.4

Qualcomm Snapdragon S801 quad-core processor

2GB RAM

16GB built-in memory

microSD cards up to 128GB

2600mAh batttery

So, one of these devices [ as well as ゼルダの伝説 ムジュラの仮面 ] had made its way into my personal inventory.

 

As you can see, the on/off button is now located at the bottom of the new 3DSXL, just below the blue light in the photo. To the left of the on/off switch is where one can find the stencil. The game cartridges are now inserted through the slot, which is also found along the underside to help make room for the new ZL and ZR trigger buttons. The switch to a microSD internal memory card is another transition (just need to figure out where the input is for that thing). Let's not forget the C-stick (a feature that should've been included a long time ago).

 

Features include:

 

Face-tracking 3D

Games leap to life with 'super-stable 3D.' The face-tracking feature uses the system’s inner cameras to adjust images based on your viewing angle, so you can enjoy total immersion in your games.

 

New controls

The C stick brings new control possibilities (like intuitive camera control) to compatible games.

 

And, new ZL and ZR buttons give you more options than ever.

 

Built-in amiibo support

Tap an amiibo™ figure to the near-field communication (NFC) reader on the lower screen to enjoy amiibo features in compatible games.

 

Get bonus items and content, customize your character, and more when you use amiibo figures (like Mario!) with amiibo-compatible games.

 

More power

Improved CPU performance means faster loading times, so you spend more time playing. Many games will look and play better than ever—and several upcoming games will be built from the ground up to take advantage of this power boost.

 

Play even more games

You can still play all Nintendo 3DS games and nearly all games from previous systems such as Nintendo DS and DSi. And, some future titles will be exclusively playable on the New Nintendo 3DS XL.

 

Easy data sharing

You can transfer your photos, music, and other files between a PC and your system’s microSDHC** card via a wireless network. No need to remove the microSDHC card!

 

Better browsing

The new-and-improved Internet browser lets you watch videos and surf the Web with ease. You can even use the ZL/ZR buttons to switch tabs or zoom in with the C stick.

 

Improved camera

Enjoy better results when you take photos in low-light situations.

Kingston Technology’nin flash bellek şirketi olan Kingston Digital Inc., endüstriyel sıcaklıklara dayanıklı yeni microSD kartını duyurdu.

UHS-I Class10 Industrial Temperature microSD kart, -40 dereceden +85 derece sıcaklığa kadar sorunsuz depolama imkanı sunuyor. 90 MB/s okuma ve 45 MB/s ya...

 

www.sosyokultur.com/40-dereceden-85-dereceye-kadar-dayani...

Pictured:

Everyday Messenger Bag in heritage tan

Everyday Pouch in heritage tan

Nikon D610

Nikon 80-200mm f/2.8 AF-D "two touch" (attached to camera)

Nikon 50mm f/1.8 AF-F

Nikon MH-25 charger

2x 2TB 2.5" hard drives

blower

LensPen lens cleaner

Insignia circular polarizer

Spare generic 32GB SD Card

SanDisk microSD card adapter

Adata 10,000 mAH portable battery pack

wireless mouse

Sunpak Digiflash 3000

Macbook Pro 15" (mid 2009) with power adapter

 

La compre, y realmente la he usado la nada misma. Esta impecable, si ni un detalle ni rayadura. Viene con su caja, manual, cable y cargador.

 

Características técnicas:

 

Procesador ARM de 1 GHz.

Pantalla de 7 pulgadas, resolución de 1.024 x 600 pixels.

Doble cámara, frontal y trasera de 3 megapixels.

Memoria interna 8, 16 y 32 Gb

Android Gingerbread 2.3.

Conexión Wi-Fi, GPS, microSD y microUSB

  

Lo vendo porque necesito urgente urgente el dinero. #70m

General Red GSM 850 / 1900 - GSM 900 / 1800

 

Status Pronto

Tamaño Dimensiones 96 x 52.4 x 14.6 mm

Peso 82 g

Display Tipo TFT touchscreen, 256K colores

Tamaño 240 x 320 pixels, 2.4 pulgadas

- Imágenes y animaciones integradas

- Acelerómetro

- Widgets en pantalla de inicio

- Teclas sensibles al tacto

Ringtones Tipo Polifónico (64 canales), MP3

Customización Descargas

Vibración Si

Memoria Agenda telefónica 500 entradas

Registro de llamadas 20 marcadas, 20 recibidas, 20 perdidas

Slot de tarjeta microSD (TransFlash), hasta 4GB

- 5 MB memoria interna

Características GPRS Clase 10 (4+1/3+2 slots)

Velocidad de datos 32 - 48 kbps

Mensajería SMS, MMS

Navegador WAP 2.0/xHTML

Reloj Si

Alarma Si

Puerto infrarrojo No

Juegos 2

Colores Azul Metálico, Plateado, Verde Acido

Cámara 1.3 MP, 1280 x 1024 pixels, video

- Reproductor MP3/AAC

- Reproductor MPEG4

- Bluetooth A2DP

- miniUSB

- Java MIDP 2.0

- Manoslibres incorporado

- Organizador

- Calendario

- Memo de voz

- T9

 

Batería Standard, Li-Ion 750 mAh

Stand-by Hasta 350 h

Tiempo de conversación Hasta 8 h

 

PARA ENTEL, CON TODOS SUS ACCESORIOS ORIGINALES ( no lo entrego en caja porque la bote hace como tres dias atras )

 

Tiene 5 meses de uso y el desgaste propio de aquel tiempo, pero fuera de eso está impeque . LO ENTREGO CON UN PROTECTOR COLOR ROSADO :)

 

$30.000 NI MAS NI MENOS :)

  

* Panasonic Lumix CM1 Phone

 

Key Photographic / Video Specifications:

 

20MP 1-inch CMOS sensor

3:2 native aspect ratio

Leica DC ELMARIT lens, 6 elements in 5 groups

F2.8 aperture

28mm equivalent focal length

ISO 100-25,600 (in extended ISO mode)

4K-video at 15fps

Raw capture

1.1MP front camera

 

Other Specifications:

4.7-inch 1080p display

Android 4.4

Qualcomm Snapdragon S801 quad-core processor

2GB RAM

16GB built-in memory

microSD cards up to 128GB

2600mAh batttery

Living in Asia and traveling frequently makes it desirable for one to be able to take one's lifestyle "on the road" with them. Of course, the flatscreen TV and stereo are still at home, but unlike the times when I still lived in the US, I spend more time listening to music here while traveling rather than sitting at home.

 

Even in the ancient days of cassettes, I had always been a stickler for quality music. Why listen to music if the sound quality is crap? Therefore, I have acquired a travel kit of premium musical gear.

 

PMP

 

Believe me, I would love to use an IPOD Touch. The design and the quality of the physical device is the cutting-edge standard. However, two things keep me from using the IPOD/iPhone. Number one is the sound quality. Apple's iPhone and iPod Touch have always been cutting-edge in terms of the user interface, materials, and video quality. However, the sound quality of the IPOD and iPhones is only average to below-average. Just Google the topic and you will see users bitching about the sound quality (but being Apple fanboys, they also apologize for Apple - "oh, maybe they will fix it in the next release").

 

The IPOD does not even have a graphic equalizer....just presets for ROCK, JAZZ, etc. The DSP chips are old and the sound quality shows it.

 

The other reason for passing on the IPOD is that piece of horrid software known as iTunes. I have thousands of CDs so I don't need to download crappy 128K music from the iTunes store, and I don't want to have to use this software every time I want to update the music in my player. With almost any other device, one can copy music and any other files back and forth from the device as if it was an external disk.

 

As an IT professional, I disdain the "control freakism" of Apple and its products. I know that their products are popular, but so is Hepatitis B. Sorry.

 

Thus, I have been using Korean PMPs from iRiver and lately, Cowon. The Cowon D3 (shown here) is an Android-based media player. Firmware updates are available on the Internet and are easily installable. And unlike the IPOD, I don't have to ask Mr.Steve Jobs for permission to use the product that I just purchased.

 

The interface is slow and terrible. The screen is AMOLED and is superb. Built-in memory is 32GB and I add a 32GB Class10 microSD card to bring total memory up to 64GB.

 

The sound quality is just stunning. The D3 has a parametric equalizer (this is a pro feature that audiophiles lust after) but to be honest, I have been using the presets. The Cowon has its own digital enhancement called "BBE" which comes in several "flavors", including 3 for headphone use. Using my Phillips earbuds, I have bass frequencies rocking in my head as if I was wearing full-sized headphones. With my Grado's, I hear new details in songs that I have listened to for 10 years....I can hear Springsteen taking a breath in the beginning of "Candy's room".

 

I rip CD's or FLAC files at 320Kbps.

 

When in the hotel, the new flat screen TVs that are in most Asian hotels that I stay (seems like Samsung has provided new TVs to hotels throughout SE Asia !) have USB and HDMI ports so that I can connect the D3 directly to the TV and listen to music in my room using the TV's sound system. Typically, there is an application in the TV for playing music, with the menu and album cover art displayed on the TV screen.

 

I also store movies on the D3 for playback on the long plane flights. I rip movies from DVD's at 2 Mbps into MP4 files or download files in the new MKV container format. The typical movie file is 1.5 to 2 GB in size. I can watch the movie on the player, or connect the player to a flat screen TV using the HDMI interface. The quality on the TV screen looks almost the same as DVD quality.

 

HEADPHONES

 

Headphones are the next link in the audio chain. The crappy white earbuds that typically come with an MP3 device should be donated to the garbage can ASAP.

 

Most of the time I use a set of Phillips SHE9800 earbuds. I discovered these by accident after reading glowing reviews on the Internet. I've never been a fan of Phillips, but these are great. I had been using IEM (in-ear monitors) from Shure and Ultimate Ears (used by Madonna, Bono, etc...who cares?) but I grew to dislike the fact that these phones have to be jammed into your ear canal in order to get the proper sound isolation. The SHE9800's also "close up" your ear canal to external noise, but they are not sitting 2mm from your eardrums like the IEM's. They consist of two parts: A high-frequency driver that sits inside your ear, and a low-frequency driver that resides outside the ear canal. You get tons of bass compared to typical earbuds, and less chance of hearing damage. They retail here in Bangkok for about US $90...probably cheaper elsewhere. Sony makes a version that has a similar design, and sounds about the same. Unfortunately, Phillips has discontinued this model. Like most things today, something good is replaced by something cheaper, of less quality and performance, but higher in "trendyness" that is attractive to brainless fashion-conscious consumers. Think: white colored devices.

 

The 9800's seem to put the music inside your head, between your ears. It is an amazing effect that audiophiles call the "sound stage inside your head".

 

On the flight, I use a Sony noise-reduction headset of the earbud type. It runs off an AAA battery, and completely eliminates the noise of the engines and wind in the cabin (unless your are in an A340 which is so quiet that you can hear a pin drop!). I've had these for almost 10 years.

 

I've noticed that some fellow travelers have started using full-sized Bluetooth noise-reduction headsets in the cabin. It just looks too big and dorky for me.

 

The downside of in-flight noise reduction is that the plane noise is completely removed, allowing you to clearly hear the screaming brat behind you, or the drunk "you-know-from-where" male tourist, who progressively adds more and more f-words (as the number of brews he has consumed increases) to his rambling drival about "what f**ing pubs he's gonna visit in the f**ing short time he's got in f**ing FOOO-KET". No worries !

 

HEADPHONE AMPS

 

Lately I have started using an add-on headphone amplifier from FIIO. This Chinese company makes portable headphone amps for a little as $10 ! I recently bought their E11 model which gives a 300 mw output. The effect is dramatic ... you get lots of bass without having to use lots of volume. I use this mostly when i'm home (with the Grado's) but even with the SHE9800s, the bass is like using full-sized headphones. The E11 runs for many days on one charge and uses a common cell phone battery (easily replaced). I bought one in Central World for about US $60 (same price as on Amazon). It has switchable impedance and bass boost.

 

For home use (meaning not walking around), I use a pair of Grado 225i phones. Grado is an American company (Brooklyn) that makes handmade headphones. Their cheapest model (the 60) has been a legend for more than 10 years and retails for only US $69. It looks like cheap Radio-Shack plastic crap but it is not. Four steps up from the SR60 is the SR 225i, which goes for about US $200. It is typically compared to $1000 headphones by audio nuts. I wanted to have a pair of really nice phones to chill with, and with the D3 and the FIIO amp, it's just bliss ! I replaced the stock (and uncomfortable) earpads with the aftermarket yellow ones. Much more comfortable, but .... yellow?

 

À force de collectionner les appareils photos Numérique

On se retrouve avec un joli paquet de cartes mémoire.

 

By dint of collecting digital cameras

We end up with a nice package of memory cards.

 

CompactFlash, SD, MMC, Stick, PCMCIA, ATA Card, SmartCard, microdrive XQD etc...

 

Pour les curieux : www.flickr.com/photos/maoby/albums/72157651212582949

Aufgenommen mit der K-5, gespeichert auf der Micro SD Karte (mit SD Card Adapter), dann am Tablett gesichtet und mit PaperArtist bearbeitet. Ich mag meine Spielzeuge :D.

Nokia n95 Smartphone

The Nokia N95 (N95-1, internally known as RM-159)

SanDisk Sansa Clip Mini Review

View Large On Black

 

In black is my new toy. It's the SanDisk Sansa Clip Mp3 player. It's kind of a cross between an iPod Nano and a Shuffle. It's more like a shuffle due to it's limited screen and minuscule size and I really like it. All the features (and more) of a shuffle with a screen so you know what's playing and can find the song you want.

 

It comes in 1,2,4,and 8GB flavors in an assortment of colors. I got the 2GB one for cheap ($20) on the deal a day site, sellout.woot.com. It was my first time 'wooting' and it shipped from nearby and came really fast. Ordered last Thursday, got a shipping email this morning with an estimate of delivery on the 23rd (Saturday) and was surprised to see it in the mailbox this afternoon, delivered by USPS. Woot doesn't have the greatest shipping time (most ship within 5 business days), but props to them for keeping their promise and getting it to me within 5 total.

 

As the title says, smaller is better sometimes. I have been looking for a small, portable throw-around mp3 player and this fits the bill perfectly. It is better than the shuffle in all aspects except the size, but with a beautiful screen as this one, I can certainly live with. To top it off, it can do what no other iPod can do, listen to FM radio, record from the radio, or even record voice notes and audio with its built-in microphone. Oh yeah, and then there's the price!

 

Surprisingly, as small as this guy is (was totally blown away at how empty the small box it came in was because it is so small), it has some incredible sound quality. One of the benefits of it not being an Apple product, is not having to use iTunes to sync my library (it's quite a big library which is already fully synced with the 60gb iPod Video). I can just drag and drop just about any song I want to the player like a USB drive. It can play your standard MP3 (including DRM ones from Napster and online music subscriptions), WMA, Audible books, OGGs, and FLACs. The last file format is the one that caught my attention. Out of the box, it can play lossless music. Lossless music (FLACs) is the de facto music format for audiophiles. It is encoded in such a way (a high bitrate) that none of the quality is lost. When MP3s are encoded, the music is compressed and music is essentially lost. With FLACs, none of this happens, you hear the original music as intended by the artist. This is one of the reasons I don't buy my songs online, it's lossy (read: junk). Of course, not everyone can tell the difference between lossless and lossy music. Try this test to see if you can tell the difference between lossy and very lossy music. Typically lossless music is encoded at 800 kbps (kilo bits per second) or higher while the maximum MP3s are encoded at are 320 KB/Sec. Anyways, getting back to the player, it can play lossless music and it can do it well. I have been listening to it with my Shure E2C earbuds all night and am enjoying every second of it. Compared with my iPod, it has a much fuller richer sounding quality to it. Certainly, not all mp3 players are made alike.

 

Moving on to the player itself, it's very small and quite light. It's made of shiny black plastic that seems sturdy (doesn't flex) but a bit cheap (but it makes it light and keeps it affordable). For navigation, it has a layout similar to the ipod. Instead of a scroll wheel, it has clickable directional buttons and a home button. In a song, the top button is the play/pause button. I keep wanting to press this to go to the menu (like the ipod), but that button is the bottom button (direct opposite from Apple's design). The left and right are for the previous and next song. One thing that is really neat is pressing the home button takes you to the main menu where you can select from music, radio, voice recording, and settings. Press it again and it instantly takes you to the "now plaing" song. I wish the iPod had a button like that instead of navigating all the way back to the begining main menu. On the left hand side is mini-usb jack and the sliding on/off/hold button. On the right, is the volume button (a simple up or down clicker) under the 3.5mm headphone hack. On the back is the removable clip which doesn't seem too strong, but has clipped and stayed clipped everywhere I've attached it (in the car, shirt, pockets, etc...).

 

The screen is a 2 color (blue and gold/yellow) 4 line OLED screen. It's a brilliantly bright crips display that can do many display many different (limited) graphics, words, and characters. It's dimmable if it's too bright or can be raised if it needs to be brighter in the sunlight. Unfortunately the little navigation wheel is not dimmable, but it's not blinding.

 

Conclusion

 

Great, you're still with me! Overall, after using it for less than 24 hours, it's a phenomenal product and I'm glad I bought it. Does exactly what it says it will do and does it well. If you're looking for an inexpensive, good sounding, small mp3 player, look no further. I'd highly recommend it. It also goes extremely well with a nice pair of headphones. I have not run into any bugs, but I have updated the firmware to the latest version and SanDisk seems to have good support. There are two forums in particular which have a large community for the Clip. One is AnythingButIpod and the official Sansa forum. I will still continue to use my big iPod but more for the longer trips and for watching movies and videos. The clip, however, is perfect for grab and go, daily use.

 

Bottom Line

 

What I liked:

Incredible Sound quality

Small and light

Inexpensive

Easy to Use

 

What I didn't like (could be improved):

Clip could be a bit stronger and flatter

Expandable memory via a MicroSD slot would just be over-the-top incredible

  

If I haven't written enough, there's another excellent review at ABI.

My lowest capacity HDD that still works together with the biggest MicroSD Card I have.

 

The 8.4GB/5400RPM Seagate U8-Series ST38410A HDD was manufactured in July 23rd, 1999, and the 64GB/UHS-I Samsung Evo Plus MicroSDXC was made in August 9th, 2017.

 

A 18-year period looks like a century in terms of technological evolution, and this Seagate U8 with its rubber skin-suit is still the best looking HDD in my opinion...

 

fits in your hand.... :-D

So after several days of waiting, Nokia have officially announced their new device which they kept secret until the official announcement. So the new device is the latest member of Nseries: the Nokia N97. This new Nokia N97 has a lot to offer. And the Nseries junior member is set to be a multimedia handset and it has a large 3.5-inch touch screen, 32GB built in memory, QWERTY sliding keyboard, WiFi, Bluetooth, GPS, 5 megapixel Carl Zeiss camera module and also the 3.5mm headphone plug. With the microSD card slot you can also further expand the Nokia N97 storage space to a max 48GB by adding a 16GB microSD card. The Nokia N97 will be sold at around 550 euros, or 693 USD in first half of 2009 next year.

 

So here are the Nokia N97 specifications:

 

Network: WCDMA 900/1900/2100 (HSDPA), EGSM 850/900/1800/1900 MHz

User Interface:S60 5th Edition

Dimensions:117.2 x 55.3 x 15.9 mm (L x W x H) *18.25 mm at camera area

Weight:Approx. 150 g

Display:3.5 inch TFT with up to 16 million colors (640×360 pixels)

Battery: Nokia Battery BP-4L, 1500 mAh

32 GB on-board memory

microSD memory card slot

Video playback:MPEG-4 / SP and MPEG-4 AVC/H.264, up to 30 fps, up to VGA resolution

RealVideo up to QCIF @ 30 fps

Windows Media (WMV9) up to CIF @ 30 fps

Flash Lite 3.0 / Flash Video in internet browser

Music playback: MP3, AAC, eAAC, eAAC+, WMA

5 megapixels camera (2584 x 1938 max)

Video capture: MPEG-4 VGA (640 x 480) at up to 30 fps

Flash: Dual LED camera flash and video light

Talk time:Up to 320 min (3G), 400 min (GSM)

Standby time:Up to 400 hrs (3G), 430 hrs (GSM)

Video playback:Up to 4,5 hours (offline mode)

Music playback:Up to 37 hours (offline mode)

WLAN IEEE 802.11b/g with UPnP support

Micro-USB connector

3.5mm stereo headphone plug and TV-out support (PAL/NTSC)

Bluetooth wireless technology 2.0 with A2DP stereo audio, enhanced data rates (EDR)

GPS receiver with support for assisted GPS (A-GPS)

 

* Backpack: Coleman C-STARTER HEATHER GRAY (22L)

 

* iNTAG MacBook Envelope Case 13inch

** 3.5 mm Female to 3.5 mm Male stereo audio cable (3 m)

** microUSB to USB cable

** Apple in-ear headphones

** Lightning to USB cable

** Clip

** Eye mask

 

* iPad mini 4

* PackTowl Original S

* MacBook Pro Retina 13 in.

 

* Umbrella

 

* Clipboard (A4 size)

** 4 pens, eraser

** cheero mobile battery (10040 mAh)

** Card case

** Mouse

** Mechanical pencil refill

 

* Mesh bag 1

** 3.5 mm Male to 3.5 mm Male stereo audio cable (50 cm)

** microUSB to Lightning converter

** 6.3 mm Male to 3.5 mm Female stereo audio plug converter

** Stamp

 

* Moleskine

* Cloth for glasses

* Tissues

 

* Mesh bag 2

** Flushable wet tissue

** Flushable tissue

** Surgical Mask

** Watch: OCW-T410TD-1AJF

 

* Wallet

* Hand towel

* Keys, USB microSD reader/writer with microSD, Whistle

* iPhone, Suica

ASUS ZenPad S 8 Z580CA-C1-BK 8 inch 64GB SSD Android Tablet, IPS Display 2048x1536 with Corning Gorilla Glass3, RAM 4GB, Intel Atom Z3580 Super Quad-Core 64bit 2.3GHz, Google Android 5.0 Lollipop, Black

 

ASUS ZenPad S 8 features an 8 inch IPS Display (2048 x 1536) with Corning Gorilla Glass3 and ASUS True2Life+ technology for premium visual experience.

Best of ZenPad, 8 inch Andriod Tablet with 4GB RAM: A Stylish Android Tablet with the Ultimate Multitasking Power. Sleek Aluminum Finish, Stylish Design, Light Weight and Affordable Tablet.

The ASUS ZenPad S 8 features an alluring look and feel inspired by the ASUS Zen design philosophy of crafting harmonious elegance and functionality.

With its clean lines and metallic finish enhanced by an elegant hairline pattern, and stunning diamond-cut edges, the ASUS ZenPad has refined, luxurious styling that fits any setting.

Intel Quad Core Performance Plus Enhanced storage and RAM: The ASUS ZenPad S 8 Z580CA is powered by a 64-bit Intel Atom Moorefield Z3580, 64bit, 2.3GHz processor with 4GB RAM, and 64GB SSD of onboard storage, you’ll never experience performance throttling and will have plenty of space for applications, pictures, movies/videos, and songs.

Enjoy fast web browsing, smooth video playback, amazing gaming experiences, and multi-tasking that doesn’t leave you waiting.

ASUS Pixelmaster Camera - See what others can’t see: The ASUS ZenPad S 8 Z580CA 's PixelMaster camera captures stunning, high-resolution photos with zero shutter lag.

The industry-leading Low Light mode employs pixel-merging technology to capture up to 400% brighter photos at night, or in low-light scenes, without the need for a flash.

The ASUS ZenPad's PixelMaster Camera includes best technology that combines software and optical design to present amazing images -

- HDR Mode

- Low Light Mode

- Zero Shutter Lag

- Beautification Mode

- 140-Degree Panoramic Selfie Mode

Reversible Charging - Reversible Charging - The latest USB Type-C interface! The new USB Type-C Connector enables you to charge and transfer files faster on your ZenPad using both sides of the cable. No more 50-50 chance of getting it right!

ASUS ZenUI - Your Best Companion. ZenMotion: Everything has a shortcut. Easy and intuitive gestures launch applications in a snap.

Draw a 'C' on the lock screen to instantly access the camera. Tap-Tap On: Double-tap the screen to unlock easily. Instantly access multiple user profiles directly through the unlock screen.

SnapView: Separate work and personal life! Independent spaces to keep your personal content private and your professional life secure, with cross-space notifications to manage both spheres.

Private contacts and messaging Privacy protection with ease. Keep your private communications secure with confidential logs and messaging protected by a PIN code.

Kids Mode: A safe playground for kids! Turn your ZenPad into a protected education and entertainment center for children, with a built-in parental controls and timer.

  

These are just some of the 1000+ enhancements ZenUI offers.

Brilliant 2K IPS Display - Bigger while smaller: ASUS ZenPad S 8 is an 8 inch tablet that is only 6.6 millimeter thin, weighs just 298 gram, and has a 74% screen-to-body ratio - an amazing engineering achievement made possible by reducing the bezel width to the bare minimum.

Features a gorgeous 2K (2048 x 1536) IPS multi-touch display uses in-plane-switching (IPS) technology to deliver 178-degree viewing angles with accurate color reproduction, no matter how you view the screen. Every video and picture comes to life with vivid, bright colors!

ASUS Splendid Technology: Allows you adjust picture color, brightness, contrast, and sharpness for your own optimized viewing experience.

Enjoy 100GB of FREE Google Drive Storage! Your ASUS ZenPad comes with 100 GB of Google Drive storage, free for 2 years.

Enjoy the great benefits of accessing files on-the-go with your ASUS ZenPad and Google Drive. Redeem this offer in the Google Drive app by April 1, 2018.

*One Google account is only entitled to 100GB of Google Drive space free for 2 years on ASUS mobile devices.

*100GB Google Drive upgrade may only be redeemed once in a single 12-month period on ASUS mobile devices.

ASUS VisualMaster: ZenPad S8, Z580CA comes with the complete ASUS VisualMaster Suite. A a suite of exclusive visual enhancement technologies that combine hardware and software to optimize all aspects of the display - including contrast, sharpness, color, clarity, and brightness - resulting in an extremely realistic viewing experience. With ASUS VisualMaster, it’s just like being there.

ASUS Tru2Life+

Clear, Blur-Free Motion! Dramatically-enhanced detail for sharper, blur-free motions. Developed for smoother playback, reduce motion blur and increase visual clarity.

ASUS Tru2Life+ technology improves video playback with fast action scenes by increasing the refresh rate, resulting in smooth and detailed motion.

ASUS Tru2Life: Provides intelligent sharpness enhancement to bring out even the smallest details in an image. Using the latest image processing technology found on high-end TVs to deliver extremely realistic images with accurate contrast, sharpness, and detail.

Its smart contrast enhancement boosts dynamic range - measured as the contrast between the lightest and darkest points of an image - to provide wider contrast levels.

With its ambient sensor together with Tru2Life technology to adjust the brightness and overall look of the display to fit different lighting conditions, providing a clearer and more brilliant outdoor viewing experience in bright sunlight.

ASUS TruVivid: Brings color to life with brilliant clarity. ASUS TruVivid technology improves screen clarity, brightness, and touch responsiveness.

This technology transforms the conventional four-layer display design-composed of cover glass, touch panel, air gap, and LCD module-into a two-layer, full lamination design, eliminating the air gap and combining the cover glass and touch panel layers.

TruVivid technology provides higher optical transparency (>94%) than conventional display, resulting in brilliant color clarity and brightness.

ASUS Bluelight Filter: Helps reduce eye fatigue and provide a comfortable viewing experience by minimizing blue light emission from the screen without affecting other colors.

Technical Details

 

Brand Name: ASUS

Series: ASUS ZenPad S 8

Item model number: Z580CA-C1-BK

 

Operating System: Google Android 5.0 Lollipop

Screen Size: 8 inches

Display: 8 inch IPS Display with Corning Gorilla Glass3

 

Screen Resolution: 2048 x 1536

Max Screen Resolution: 2048 x 1536 pixels

Processor: Intel Atom Z3580 Super Quad-Core 64bit 2.3GHz

 

RAM: 4 GB SDRAM DDR3 (1066MHz)

Onboard Storage: 64 GB SSD

Dual Camera: Front 5MP, Back 8MP Camera with ASUS PixelMaster Technology

 

Wireless Type (Dual band): 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac

Bluetooth: 4.0

Color: Black

 

Rear Webcam Resolution: 8 MP

Processor Brand: Intel Moorefield

Processor Count: 4

 

Computer Memory Type: DDR3 SDRAM

Flash Memory Size: 64 GB

USB Type-C connector

 

ASUS VisualMaster True2Life + technology for Blur-Free Motion playback

1 x microSD Card slot, support up to 128GB SDHC

Item Weight: 11.2 ounces (0.7 pounds)

 

Item Dimensions L x W x H: 5.3 x 8 x 0.3 inches

Batteries: Lithium Metal batteries required. (included)

Average Battery Life (in hours): 8 hours

Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

Domestic Shipping: Currently, item can be shipped only within the U.S. and to APO/FPO addresses. For APO/FPO shipments, please check with the manufacturer regarding warranty and support issues.

International Shipping: This item can be shipped to select countries outside of the U.S.

Date First Available at Amazon.com: July 30, 2015

  

Compare Prices ASUS ZenPad S 8 Z580CA-C1-BK 8 inch 64GB SSD Android Tablet, IPS Display 2048x1536 with Corning Gorilla Glass3, RAM 4GB, Intel Atom Z3580 Super Quad-Core 64bit 2.3GHz, Google Android 5.0 Lollipop, Black

Read More Customer Reviews ASUS ZenPad S 8 Z580CA-C1-BK 8 inch 64GB SSD Android Tablet, IPS Display 2048x1536 with Corning Gorilla Glass3, RAM 4GB, Intel Atom Z3580 Super Quad-Core 64bit 2.3GHz, Google Android 5.0 Lollipop, Black

Please refer the User Manual before use.

Maybe you interest more product together.

-> ASUS ZenPad S 8.0 Z580C Screen Protector , SPARIN® Glass Screen Protector for ASUS ZenPad S 8.0 (Z580C/Z580CA), Not for ZenPad 8.0 (Z380C)

-> Asus Zenpad S 8.0 (Z580C/Z580CA) Case - HOTCOOL Ultra Slim Lightweight SmartCover Stand Case For 2015 Released Asus Zenpad S 8.0 Z580C / Z580CA Tablet, Black reviews-tablet.com/asus-zenpad-s-8-z580ca-c1-bk/

The new N97 in the flash.... ;-)

So after several days of waiting, Nokia have officially announced their new device which they kept secret until the official announcement. So the new device is the latest member of Nseries: the Nokia N97. This new Nokia N97 has a lot to offer. And the Nseries junior member is set to be a multimedia handset and it has a large 3.5-inch touch screen, 32GB built in memory, QWERTY sliding keyboard, WiFi, Bluetooth, GPS, 5 megapixel Carl Zeiss camera module and also the 3.5mm headphone plug. With the microSD card slot you can also further expand the Nokia N97 storage space to a max 48GB by adding a 16GB microSD card. The Nokia N97 will be sold at around 550 euros, or 693 USD in first half of 2009 next year.

 

So here are the Nokia N97 specifications:

 

Network: WCDMA 900/1900/2100 (HSDPA), EGSM 850/900/1800/1900 MHz

User Interface:S60 5th Edition

Dimensions:117.2 x 55.3 x 15.9 mm (L x W x H) *18.25 mm at camera area

Weight:Approx. 150 g

Display:3.5 inch TFT with up to 16 million colors (640×360 pixels)

Battery: Nokia Battery BP-4L, 1500 mAh

32 GB on-board memory

microSD memory card slot

Video playback:MPEG-4 / SP and MPEG-4 AVC/H.264, up to 30 fps, up to VGA resolution

RealVideo up to QCIF @ 30 fps

Windows Media (WMV9) up to CIF @ 30 fps

Flash Lite 3.0 / Flash Video in internet browser

Music playback: MP3, AAC, eAAC, eAAC+, WMA

5 megapixels camera (2584 x 1938 max)

Video capture: MPEG-4 VGA (640 x 480) at up to 30 fps

Flash: Dual LED camera flash and video light

Talk time:Up to 320 min (3G), 400 min (GSM)

Standby time:Up to 400 hrs (3G), 430 hrs (GSM)

Video playback:Up to 4,5 hours (offline mode)

Music playback:Up to 37 hours (offline mode)

WLAN IEEE 802.11b/g with UPnP support

Micro-USB connector

3.5mm stereo headphone plug and TV-out support (PAL/NTSC)

Bluetooth wireless technology 2.0 with A2DP stereo audio, enhanced data rates (EDR)

GPS receiver with support for assisted GPS (A-GPS)

 

Just a sampling of computer storage media that've been introduced since the invention of the modern Personal Computer.

 

The background object is a 5.25" floppy disc. The amount of space on this disc was a whopping 1.2 MB, which was quite spacious during the PC revolution of the 1980s. Typical hard drives at the time was 10-20 MB in size.

 

Other formats soon made the 5.25" floppy disc obsolete. Those successors to the 5.25" disc have also become obsolete.

 

Nowadays, computer storage devices rarely rely on moving parts as they use more electricity and can shorten the overall life span of the device and drive.

 

Clockwise from top center: MultiMediaCard (16MB); SecureDigital card; Memory Stick PRO Duo (256MB); SmartMedia (8MB; now obsolete); xD Picture Card (16MB); original Memory Stick (4MB; this particular style no longer exists); and CompactFlash Type II (64MB). In the center of the floppy is the current leader in diminutive size, MicroSD (128MB).

 

As of January 2008, with the exception of the SmartMedia, original Memory Stick, and the 5.25" Floppy, all these storage media have capacities exceeding 2GB.

 

My, how times change! From the gigantic 133.35mm (5.25") floppy to the nanoscopic 15mm MicroSD, from the bit-size 1.2MB floppy to the chomp-sized 8GB MicroSD, the storage technology changes faster than we can keep up.

As someone who grew up with computers that had kilobytes of storage, then played computer games where you had to swap 1.44MB floppy disks, then was absolutely blown away when Iomega Zip disks came out (100MB!!!), I continue to be in awe of technology and how far we have come.

 

This is a 1TB microSD card. It's about the size of a fingernail. As of today, it's priced at ~$250 - not exactly a bargain in terms of $ / MB (a 512GB microSD card can regularly be had for ~$70), but it's so impressive to me that I just had to do it. For reference, not long ago, I bought a few 2TB Samsung 860 EVO Solid State Drives (TLC-NAND) at ~$250 each.

All my stuff to boulder/builder/free solo; film; and edit on the go ... just have some fun in life :-)

 

Main Backpack (Case Logic RBP-217-BLACK):

1. Tripod (Ideal PFV 03)

2. Climbing Shoes (5.10 Anasazi Pink) + Safety Biner

3. Dash Mount for GPS/Smartphone

4. Cleaning cloth for touch screens

5. External UBB 3.0 500GB Hard Disk

6. Assorted USB cables and AC adapters

7. Instant coffee/Coke/Toilet stuff/Extra clothes

8. Pens & paper

9. Climbing Guidebooks

 

Everyday carry shoulderbag wich fits in the laptop compartment of the main backpack (Golla Mobile Generation):

1. Garmin Vivofit & Heart rate strap

2. Pen & notebook

3. Panasonice Camcorder

4. HP Envy X2

5. Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 7.0"

6. Tablet kickstand

7. 8000 & 2100 mAh USB Charger

8. Ryght bluetooth headphones

 

Not in the pic:

1. Huawei Ascend P6

2. Earbuds

3. Smart Card Reader

4. SD/MicroSD Adapter

5. SD/MicroSD Cards

 

2 4 5 6 7 ••• 79 80