Another great micro SD card for the Nintendo Switch and Steam Deck has dropped to its lowest-ever-price, offering 512GB of A2-rated memory for under £40. The Lexar Play 512GB micro SD card offers a ...
Someone at the SDcard Association lately is feeling the need for speed, and considering our stance on SD cards we’re glad to see it. The association has announced a new bus in the UHS-III ...
A micro SD card with a U3 A2 speed rating is definitely worth considering. Despite the Nintendo Switch throttling any Micro SDXC card down to U1 speeds, having a faster card can be advantageous for ...
The single-board computer Raspberry Pi uses SD cards for storage, so the official Raspberry Pi statement states that 'the SD card you use makes a big difference in your Raspberry Pi experience.' Until ...
The SanDisk Extreme A2 microSDXC card strikes just the right balance of good-enough performance at a reasonable price. Unless ...
Lexar just announced “the world’s largest A2 microSD card”. No, it’s still a 512GB card, but what sets it apart from the previous cards with this capacity is the A2 rating. It stands for Application ...
Storage is one of the major concerns when it comes to owning a portable PC. So, if you're soon to be a new owner of a Steam Deck, ROG Ally, or Nintendo Switch, you should absolutely consider getting a ...
The SD Association recently took the wraps off SD Specification 6.0 which includes the A2 (Application Performance Class 2) standard, designed for newer Android devices with the capability of using ...
SD Cards with the A2 logo on them should support random read speeds that are twice as fast as cards with the A1 logo. There’s just one catch: while the A2 specification was introduced more than a year ...