A Beginner’s Guide To Memory Cards

Posted By: Natalie  //  Category: Accessories, Photography Equipment, Technical & Repairs

Digital Cameras Are Everywhere These Days

A quality camera at a reasonable price is not hard to find today because every electronics manufacturer has their own range and the competition is fierce.

Unlike traditional cameras which used light sensitive film to capture images, digital cameras use its own set of light sensing technology to convert the world we see into a digital file at the touch of a button. This file is then stored to the camera’s internal memory or more often than not to a memory card that you will have to purchase in order to expand the camera’s picture storing capabilities.

The Cost of Storage Is Cheaper Than Ever Before

Most manufacturers give measly little built-in memory with their cameras because they want to keep the costs of their camera as low as possible so as to ward off the competition, and in the past memory cards with decent storage capacities were expensive.

Thankfully the price of memory cards for digital cameras has come down drastically.

You can now get 1GB or more for under a tenner, which is enough for at least a few 100 photos.

memory cards for cameras

With a memory card installed you can usually just remove the card from your camera and insert it into your PC or laptop if it comes with a memory card reader, or as is more usually the case you can use the supplied USB cable to plug your camera straight into your computer to transfer images.

However, the one thing that you should be aware of in relation to memory cards in digital photography is that there is not one standard format of memory card that will work in all cameras.

Some manufacturers differ in their preference, so before you buy a camera it’s essential that you find out what type of memory card it requires.

Different Types of Memory Card

The most commonly used memory card format is the SD card, used by Samsung, Kodak, Panasonic, Pentax and many others. This means that it’s fairly easy to find cheap SD memory cards with good storage capacities either online or in an electronics store that will work instantly with your digital camera.

But beware…there has been a recent development in SD technology which has produced SDHC cards, with storage sizes of 4GB right up to 32GB. Most older cameras which take SD cards won’t be able to take advantage of these increased capacity SDHC cards, so check a new camera before you buy to see if it is compatible.

Sony cameras require a Sony Memory Stick, which is of course Sony’s own memory card format, and Olympus use XD cards which differ in size and shape from SD cards.


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