NikonGear'23
Gear Talk => Other => Topic started by: Akira on March 06, 2018, 01:19:43
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According to this article, ProGrade Digital who bought Lexar is not going to produce XQD cards, which results in the situation where Sony will become the one-and-only supplier of XQD cards:
https://www.dpreview.com/news/1976696459/confirmed-prograde-digital-will-not-make-xqd-cards-is-betting-on-cfexpress-instead
Things don't appear to be pessimistic. The next generation CFexpress card can be backward-compatible with the existing XQD slots though the firmware update on the XQD-dedicated cameras, which would put an end to the futile memory card format leadership competition.
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So the CFast form factor might be the looser in the long run.
... "As new standards gain in popularity, I believe that we will see some current form-factors slowly begin to phase out. " ...
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So the CFast form factor might be the looser in the long run.
... "As new standards gain in popularity, I believe that we will see some current form-factors slowly begin to phase out. " ...
I'm not sure because I don't know much about the popularity of DFast cards. Canon is the only supporter of CFast that I know of. The cards are produced by Sandisk, Lexar, Transcend, etc.
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According to this article, ProGrade Digital who bought Lexar is not going to produce XQD cards, which results in the situation where Sony will become the one-and-only supplier of XQD cards:
No. Longsys bought Lexar from Micron and is currently producing XQD cards.
ProGrade Digital is a new company and is different from Micron and Longsys.
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Ilkka, thank you for the correction. It is not good to read the news after the pernoctation. :-[