Dobry den. Mam taku otazku, mam notebook Acer Aspire 5630 a na nom citacku pametovych kariet. Vsetky SD karty mi cita ale ako tam vlozim SDHC tak nie. Mam pocit ze potrebujem SDHC reader ,ale vopred sa chcem spitat ci sa neda neako moja citacka na SD kary "update-nut" ?
Dakujem za vase vysvetlenie - rady
SDHC na notebooku
Re: SDHC na notebooku
Jedine novou citackou.j3richo napísal:Dobry den. Mam taku otazku, mam notebook Acer Aspire 5630 a na nom citacku pametovych kariet. Vsetky SD karty mi cita ale ako tam vlozim SDHC tak nie. Mam pocit ze potrebujem SDHC reader ,ale vopred sa chcem spitat ci sa neda neako moja citacka na SD kary "update-nut" ?
Dakujem za vase vysvetlenie - rady
Znamena to, ze ked budes mat citacku SDHC kariet, bude citat aj SD karty, naopak nie.Compatibility issues with 2 GB and larger cards
Devices that use SD cards identify the card by requesting a 128-bit identification string from the card. For standard-capacity SD cards, 12 of the bits are used to identify the number of memory clusters (ranging from 1 to 4096) and 3 of the bits are used to identify the number of blocks per cluster (which decode to 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256 or 512 blocks per cluster).
In older 1.x implementations the standard capacity block was exactly 512 bytes. This gives 4096 x 512 x 512 = 1 gigabyte of storage memory. A later revision of the 1.x standard allowed a 4-bit field to indicate 1024 or 2048 bytes per block instead, yielding more than 1 gigabyte of memory storage. Devices designed before this change may incorrectly identify such cards, usually by misidentifying a card with lower capacity than is the case by assuming 512 bytes per block rather than 1024 or 2048.
For the new SDHC high capacity card (2.0) implementation, 22 bits of the identification string are used to indicate the memory size in increments of 512 KBytes. Currently 16 of the 22 bits are allowed to be used, giving a maximum size of 32 GB. All SDHC 4-GB and larger cards must be 2.0 implementations. Two bits that were previously reserved and fixed at 0 are now used for identifying the type of card, 0=standard, 1=HC, 2=reserved, 3=reserved. Non-HC devices are not programmed to read this code and therefore cannot correctly read the identification of the card.
All SDHC readers work with standard SD cards.[11]
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secure_Digital_card