CompactFlash Competitor
Compact flash memory card
By Yoshiko Hara, EE Times
Tokyo -- A compact flash memory card that uses a file format with
larger sectors has been proposed by Sony Corp. and five other Japanese companies.
They say the format is better suited to audio/video and digital still cameras.
Tentatively called MemoryStick, the card, will compete with the CompactFlash
format supported by SanDisk Corp. and its backers, as well as Toshiba Corp.'s
SmartMedia card and the Miniature Card format supported by Intel, Sharp,
Fujitsu and Advanced Micro Devices.
The card also has the backing of Casio Computer Co., the largest player in
the digital still-camera market, Fujitsu Ltd., Olympus Optical Co., Sanyo
Electric Co. and Sharp Corp.
An industry analyst called MemoryStick "a sign of probable reorganization"
of the compact-flash-card market. "The group members in a body will form
a rivaling power to CompactFlash in the market," said the analyst, Masahiro
Suzuki of Dataquest.
The card is shaped like a stick of chewing gum--21 x 50 x 2.8 mm--in which
four flash-memory chips can be mounted. A logic ASIC developed by Fujitsu
is also implemented for memory control. For use in consumer products, the
card has only 10 pins to increase reliability and durability. The capacity
is 2 Mbytes to 32 Mbytes using currently available flash chips, but it is
scalable as denser chips become available.
A Sony spokesman said that the MemoryStick has a simplified file management,
using 8 kbytes as the minimum recording size. Audio and video data are generally
copious and were not handled efficiently on card formats with 512-byte segments
optimized for computer-based data processing.
The file format is compatible with an image-data format proposed for the
IrDA standard to transmit digital still-camera data by infrared ports. That
format is being proposed by Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp. (NTT), Sony,
Sharp, Casio and Okaya System Software. When the proposed IrDA image format
is adopted as an IrDA standard, data exchange with computers will also be
easy, the Sony spokesman said.
(Next article.)
(c) 1997 CMP Media, Inc
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