Reddit Reddit reviews SanDisk 512GB Extreme PRO SDXC UHS-I Card (SDSDXPA-512G-G46)

We found 23 Reddit comments about SanDisk 512GB Extreme PRO SDXC UHS-I Card (SDSDXPA-512G-G46). Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Computer Accessories & Peripherals
Electronics
Memory Cards
Computers & Accessories
SecureDigital Memory Cards
SanDisk 512GB Extreme PRO SDXC UHS-I Card (SDSDXPA-512G-G46)
Shot speeds up to 90MB/s; transfer speeds up to 95 MB/sDimension 0.94 x 1.25 x 0.08 inches (24 x 32 x 2.1 millimeter). Engineered to capture 4K Ultra High Definition. Not compatible with micro SD/mini SD slotsUHS Speed Class 3 (U3)Built for and tested in harsh conditions; temperature proof, water proof, shock proof, and x-ray proofSecurity: Built-in write-protect switch prevents accidental data lossOperating temperature: -13F to 185F (-25C to 85 C)Storage temperature: -40F to 185F (-40C to 85C)Added Protection: 1 year downloadable RescuePro data recovery software offer, for bringing accidentally deleted images back to life
Check price on Amazon

23 Reddit comments about SanDisk 512GB Extreme PRO SDXC UHS-I Card (SDSDXPA-512G-G46):

u/trustinbacon · 9 pointsr/lgv20

SanDisk Extreme Pro 512 GB is around $260 USD. A 2TB one is going to cost more than the V20 itself.

u/sauceprovider1 · 6 pointsr/pics

These 3 are ridiculous. Especially the micro sd one.

Flash Drive

SD

Micro SD

u/BordomBeThyName · 5 pointsr/gaming

A quick check of the Gamecube systems specs and the Raspberry Pi Zero specs says that the Pi Zero is technically capable of running Gamecube games. Because there are 661 GC games delivered on [1.5 Gb discs](http://www.avrev.com/home-theater-accessories/game-systems/nintendo-gamecube-special-edition.html "Second paragraph, near the bottom") means that the entire GameCube library is less than 992Gb. So, with a Raspberry Pi Zero and two of these little guys, you could probably fit a GameCube and every single game up your ass for a little under $700.

u/DaGeek247 · 4 pointsr/LinusTechTips

This will end up costing you 2,500$ + the 25$ card. https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B074RNRM2B/ A similar sized ssd will cost 1,500$.

But we can take this further. There are 512GB capacity MicroSD cards. This will end up costing 3,000$ for the sd cards, and net you a whopping 5TB setup. Plus 25$ for the card. https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B00NP699ZI/

There are no commercially available 5TB SSDs. Well, it might exist but i could not find one for sale. https://pcpartpicker.com/products/internal-hard-drive/#t=0&sort=ppgb&page=1&S=4000000,12000000

This card allows you to have a 5TB single card solid state setup, before anyone else.

u/GearBent · 3 pointsr/retrobattlestations

We're up to 512Gb microSD cards now.

http://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Extreme-UHS-I-Memory-SDSDXPA-512G-G46/dp/B00NP699ZI

And the standards allow for up to 2 Terabyte Sd cards

u/waywardchicken · 3 pointsr/gaming

TIL we're up to 512!

u/PackOfVelociraptors · 2 pointsr/OldSchoolCool

Double that

Edit: Oh wait, that's not micro. But there have been 1TB micro SD cards developed, but they are not available to consumers.

u/Lurking4Answers · 2 pointsr/pcmasterrace
u/Dman222123222 · 2 pointsr/DataHoarder

To be fair, flash memory has gotten insanely dense. Here's a 200GB MicroSD card, and here's a 512GB full-sized SD card.

u/BitcoinAllBot · 1 pointr/BitcoinAll



Author: spirtdica

Content:

>Let me start this thread by saying my interest was aroused by this video:
https://vimeo.com/94353049

>I'm new to BTC cold storage, so correct me if I'm wrong
1.) Armory runs on 2 computers. The offline part of Armory isn't very memory intensive, but the online portion is because it is tasked with downloading the ENTIRE blockchain.
2.) Offline Armory lends itself well to TAILS because the file isn't very big. Online Armory doesn't easily fit on a thumb drive.
3.) But then I found these 512 GB SD memory cards.
http://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Extreme-512GB-Memory-SDSDXPA-512G-G46/dp/B00NP699ZI
As I understand, TAILS OS can be downloaded onto an SD right?

>Is there any reason that I can't download Online Armory onto a TAILS OS persistent volume, provided there is enough memory? Of course, I would have to constantly update the persistent volume, but thats better than having to download the entire blockchain every time I wanted to use Armory.

>I guess my question is, if I'm going to have two computers for Armory, is there some way I could run TAILS on both of them? If I could do that, I would finally feel secure enough to really embrace bitcoin. I might be paranoid but I wouldn't even trust anything other than a squeaky-clean OS with my public keys. Sure its not a direct security risk but privacy risk is an indirect security risk...

u/Madmagican- · 1 pointr/nintendo

Thanks for looking out, but I was never gonna buy one.

I'm just a college student on a college budget who did a quick search and didn't fact check before posting

But also they sell for $340+ on Amazon so they exist. just not to the extent at which I thought they did

u/JClocale · 1 pointr/mildlyinteresting

You can do better than a 128GB thumb drive. How about a 512GB SD card or a 256GB MicroSD card?

u/Beshington · 1 pointr/pcmasterrace

you need a SATA III SSD but if you dont want to reinstall windows or other junk, you could get one of these

u/Takanashi_Aihlia · 1 pointr/ipod

 

If you want just raw storage space, it's probably cheapest with the Quad, and 4 MicroSD cards.

 

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To break it down we'll say 1TB is the goal you're aiming for:
As far as I'm aware, CompactFlash is basically dead now. If you go your nearest electronics store, or Amazon, the biggest size you'll probably find is 256GB, so that's out. And that 256GB CF card is also over $200.

 

If you wanted to go with the Solo or Dual model, theoretically you could get up to 1TB with a Solo or 2TBs with a Dual as Lexar has announced a 1TB SDXC card but just one will cost you $500. Which isn't that far off from what 1TB with a Dual would cost you, with 512GB SDXC cards being $250 a piece.

 

To get 1TB with the Quad realistically, you can buy 4 SanDisk MicroSD cards that are 256GBs each, for a total of about $175 (they're $44 a piece on Amazon). For $312 you could bump that all the way up to 1.6TBs, as they also offer 400GB cards at $78 a piece. You could get Samsung Evo MicroSD cards that go up to 512GBs per card, for a total of 2TBs, but those are also $200 a piece, so that 2TBs would cost $800.


 

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As far as how the iFlash Dual and iFlash Quad works, the card type and size doesn't matter; they don't run as a RAID, they run as
"Just A Bunch of Disks" so you can mix and match any brand and any size at your convenience. This also means all your data isn't lost if one of the cards fail, you only lose the songs that were stored on that particular card, and can replace the failed card and re-add just those songs.

 

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The bitrate of the songs do make an impact on how fast the battery drains, yes. As does the temperature of the device, screen brightness, and the volume. Apple's estimate for how long the OEM battery lasts (I think was 14 hours for the 30GB 5th gen?) was probably calculated with no case, songs at the iTunes "default" of 128kbps, EQ off, brightness low, and volume low to medium.

 

When a friend of mine was looking at upgrading his I think the math I came up with was that an 850mAh battery would get something around 7.5 hours at 320kbps, max volume and brightness.

It was something like: That level of usage on a flash based system would require 0.412 watts per hour to use, and an 850mAh battery at 3.7 volts would output 3.145 watts per hour and 3.145 / 0.412 is 7.63 hours.

 

Disclosure: I'm also terrible at math and that could have been all wrong.


But with moderate usage and FLAC files, I would recommend getting the biggest battery you feel comfortable with. Batteries are also relatively cheap. The 850mAh one he was looking at back then is only $12. If you have the money to spare, you could try out a few batteries and see if they seem legit or not.

 

u/electronicfixdude · 1 pointr/GalaxyS8

https://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Extreme-SDHC-UHS-I-SDSDXPA-512G-G46/dp/B00NP699ZI

They don't make micros in this size though..... I use this one for my camera and that is about it.

u/Talks_To_Cats · 1 pointr/GalaxyS8

I wouldn't be so sure. Competitors have 512GB SDXC cards out already, Samsung just hasn't stepped up yet. That's why it's no suprise that a Samsung phone doesn't support higher capacity. We could very easilly see them before the end of the year.

The question is whether they'll patch it for the S8, use it as a "exclusive feature" for the Note 8, or just wait until next year's models. That I couldn't tell you.

u/MarcoGB · 1 pointr/NintendoSwitch

San disk: https://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Extreme-SDHC-UHS-I-SDSDXPA-512G-G46/dp/B00NP699ZI

PNY: https://www.amazon.com/PNY-Elite-Performance-512GB-P-SDX512U3H-GE/dp/B00XJRX01M

Lexar: https://www.amazon.com/Lexar-Professional-512GB-Rescue-Software/dp/B012PLFAAG

I heard of a Kingston one for 512 GB as well but haven't found it for sale anywhere.

256Gb ones should be pretty easy to find. If performance matters to you Samsung and Sandisk are the most reliable in read/write speeds actually hitting the threshold.

u/codemasterv · 1 pointr/nintendo

They might. Nintendo has been releasing a lot more multi release titles.

SuMo for example.

and at one point during the presentation Nintendo said they did away with region locking so logical thing to do would be 1 game packed with 8 different languages like SuMo

Would also like to point out, Just because its a card doesnt mean there isnt space. If there is room on this then there is room on the game.

Aaaand would like to point out Vita games like Digimon World Order. It was a Asia release but the English subs were on the game card but just locked out.

u/icravedanger · 0 pointsr/3DS

Why would you buy this? If you want the most space possible, just get the Sandisk. http://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Extreme-UHS-I-Memory-SDSDXPA-512G-G46/dp/B00NP699ZI