Toshiba 128GB M203 MicroSD Class 10 U1 100MB/s with Adapter
CAPTURE YOUR PRECIOUS MOMENTS The new microSD™ UHS-I card is able to quickly transfer data to PC with higher read speed rate and offers large capacity with BiCS FLASH™ architecture. BEST FLEXIBILITY FOR ALL EXITING MOMENTS Ideal for mobile device user looking for extended storage. 5 YEAR WARRANTY Engineered to Toshiba’s famously high quality standards,
CAPTURE YOUR PRECIOUS MOMENTS
The new microSD™ UHS-I card is able to quickly transfer data to PC with higher read speed rate and offers large capacity with BiCS FLASH™ architecture.
BEST FLEXIBILITY FOR ALL EXITING MOMENTS
Ideal for mobile device user looking for extended storage.
5 YEAR WARRANTY
Engineered to Toshiba’s famously high quality standards, the Toshiba SD Memory Cards are backed by a solid five-year limited standard warranty. microSD™ M203 is shock and waterproof.
INCLUDES SD ADAPTER
The Toshiba M203 microSD™ card is offered with and without an Adapter. It is compatible with SD, SDHC™ or SDXC™ slots.
Main Features
Read Speed: Up to 100 MB/s5 years warrantyShockproofWaterproofUse for: cameras, mobile phones
Product Features
- Read Speed: Up to 100 MB/s
- Shockproof and Waterproof
- Full HD recording
- Use for: cameras, mobile phones
Not the fastest, but quite cheap, probably sufficient for most people To be fair I think this card is sufficient for most use cases and it’s significantly cheaper than some higher range SanDisk and Samsung cards.I attach benchmarsk in CrystalDiskMark of the following Micro SD cards…
Only the best IMHO My second card like this from this firm.The Toshiba Exceria M302 64GB Micro SD Memory Card 90 MB/s which is excellent for capturing 4K videos and action shots in 4k.Class 10 and rated at U3 (U3 menas the BUS speed).Both my “Sports” cameras use these Micro cards and they are very good.Also 64Gb gives me a huge amount of space to store what I am shooting.Not as much as 128Gb in my larger cameras and camcorders but 64Gb is as large as these 2 cameras use for…
Could be better, but still okay. I’ve bought six of these (four 16GB, two 32GB) for various single board computers (Raspberry Pi, Tinker Board, etc) because they were cheap, and seemed to get the job done. However, I’ve been noticing some problems.Firstly, the 32GB cards have fewer sectors on them than 32GB SanDisk cards. This means that copying an OS image from SanDisk cards to these cards takes more steps than it should (because you have to resize your main partition with fdisk). However, that might just be an…