SanDisk 1TB Extreme microSDXC UHS-I Memory Card with Adapter - C10, U3, V30, 4K, A2, Micro SD - SDSQXA1-1T00-GN6MA
Below are the top discussions from Reddit that mention this Amazon listing.
Electronics Computers & Accessories Computer Accessories & Peripherals Memory Cards Micro SD Cards
- Up to 160MB/s read speeds to save time transferring high res images and 4K UHD videos (2); Requires compatible devices capable of reaching such speeds
- Up to 90MB/s write speeds for fast shooting; Requires compatible devices capable of reaching such speeds
- 4K UHD and Full HD Ready (2) with UHS speed class 3 (U3) and video speed class 30 (V30) (5)
- Rated A2 for faster loading and in app performance (8)
- Built for and tested in harsh conditions: Temperature Proof, Water Proof, shock Proof and x ray Proof (4)
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SanDisk
Reddit Posts and Comments
1 posts • 42 mentions • top 41 shown below
95 points • tman2damax11
Even crazier 1tb smaller than a postage stamp, albeit much slower than an NVMe drive.
5 points • TwoThirdsGuppy
[Amazon/US] SanDisk 1TB Extreme MicroSD - $182.99 (Deal of the day)
3 points • SystemOutPrintln
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07P9W5HJV/ref=twister_B07V2PRSXC?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
3 points • Ydino
You can get it here for yourself
3 points • gandhiofcoc
1TB is $183 today https://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Extreme-microSDXC-Memory-Adapter/dp/B07P9W5HJV . The real gem is the 512 for $80 but Amazon is quoting a delivery date in September now (guess that's an indication of how good of a deal it is)
2 points • TacticalRooster42
It probably is not 1tb, but there are things as small as that that can hold 1 tb For Example https://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Extreme-microSDXC-Memory-Adapter/dp/B07P9W5HJV
1 points • queuebitt
The SanDisk Extreme 1TB is also on sale... for $207.99 (20% off typical price). The 512MB aren't at $80 yet regularly so it'll be a while for the 1TB.
1 points • Ninjacentaur
I saw a 1TB micro SD card on Amazon the other day. Link
I agree though. Next thing you know we’ll have petabyte hard drives, flash drives, and SD cards.
1 points • HNIC215
I purchased this SanDisk 1TB Extreme MicroSDXC for my s20 Ultra.
1 points • DR650SE
If you just want space, how big is your wallet? Get four [of these] (https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07P9W5HJV/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_l5mtEb5RQ4WNK)
You'll be limited on the number of tracks, unless you use rockbox. Than there's no limit and you can fill it with FLAC files.
1 points • nomadben
https://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Extreme-microSDXC-Memory-Adapter/dp/B07P9W5HJV?th=1
1 points • factor3x
As an IT major and a lover of technology, it's not impossible at all to record video for an entire 12-14 hour shift. Most camera seem to record at 720p (Maybe 1080 if configured). There are 1TB Micro SD cards now. Cameras can be reengineer fairly easily to detect a multitude of triggers (Such as elevated heart rate, blunt force or harsh jarring, loud noises such as gunshots or explosions). It can be configure to record 4k at 60FPS for a period based of any engineered trigger to change from lower 720p quality to the highest quality footage for evidence. Most camera are configured to turn on with manual intervention anyways, so having a high quality camera isn't impossible for a 14 hour shift. With that, with the wireless technology we have today and the bandwidth wireless can provide, the cameras could even send live feed and have a backend server save the video so the camera itself, if destroyed, is not a loss for evidence.
I think officers should be warmed, written up and upwards to suspension and termination if they do not use their body camera on every single call/stop/encounter that has paperwork involved.
None of the above is impossible by a large stretch... Police just aren't investing their billions in training and technology that civilians need for their safety from the cops themselves. That is the problem.
1 points • 6mm94
https://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Extreme-microSDXC-Memory-Adapter/dp/B07P9W5HJV/ref=mp_s_a_1_3?dchild=1&keywords=1tb%2Bmicro&qid=1602688807&smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER&sr=8-3&th=1&psc=1
1 points • NovaAetas
https://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Extreme-microSDXC-Memory-Adapter/dp/B07P9W5HJV
They are very pricey. Would recommend dropping to 512GB where they are sub 100 dollars.
1 points • JeromeZilcher
> How many minutes till I run out of space on the 512 SD card?
Maybe get this instead?
- https://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Extreme-microSDXC-Memory-Adapter/dp/B07P9W5HJV/
But in all seriousness, those are some big DNG (RAW) files!
1 points • TemptedTemplar
There is currently only 1 consumer grade 1tb micro SD Card on the market.
There are a few professional grade devices out there for photography and such, but they're waaaay more than $300.
1 points • SuperGrandor
your link is sold by adorama.
Here is one that you should be looking at
https://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Extreme-microSDXC-Memory-Adapter/dp/B07P9W5HJV?ref_=ast_sto_dp
1 points • fpcreator2000
Apologies, the link was copied and pasted as a recommendation based on a question. Hopefully, the extra tags that I removed from the URL make the link acceptable. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07P9W5HJV
1 points • Austinswill
Jesus Christ... I think we can afford 200 bucks more per Body cam to have 10 hours of recording capability. https://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Extreme-microSDXC-UHS-I-adaptador/dp/B07P9W5HJV/ref=sr_1_3?dchild=1&keywords=1tb+sd+card&qid=1591756838&s=pc&sr=1-3
2 points • BlankSeal
Right now I'm debating between 2 I see on sale on Amazon.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B07P9W5HJV?pf_rd_p=7ce4a5d7-8902-444d-810b-88ada843ceae&aaxitk=0.1xAeQsrZsM.3NjecmZKA&hsa_cr_id=7772202150701&ref_=sbx_be_s_sparkle_scm_asin_1&th=1&psc=1
This one is on sale for $20, good value, decent 128gb of storage, etc.
https://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-200GB-microSDXC-Memory-Adapter/dp/B073JY5T7T?ref_=Oct_DLandingS_M_181260d5_64&smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER
This one is 200GB for only a few dollars more which seems a good deal to me...but idk what any of the additional specs or symbols mean so I can't tell if its actually worse in some way.
3 points • michaelz08
For something with a size of 1TB, I’m not sure you’re going to get anything smaller than a micro SD card.
Though that will be a lot slower than a Flash Drive, which already will see major slowdowns when you copy a lot of data in one sitting. A flash will take many hours to copy a terabyte of data; an SD card could take a day at minimum (times are guess-timations).
Larger but much faster, with more consistent performance, is a portable M.2 SSD.
My recommendation: the portable SSD. It is the fastest, longest lasting, and surprisingly the cheapest- and it can fit in a purse or coat pocket.
1 points • IceStormNG
The card is probably fake. But yeah, it's just a flash drive.
​
There are 1TB microSD cards from SanDisk. https://www.amazon.com/-/de/SanDisk-Extreme-microSDXC-Memory-Adapter/dp/B07P9W5HJV/
​
I'm not sure though how long that thing would last if you use it constantly. Also the cards are pretty slow compared to an SSD and are sometimes even slower than a regular HDD.
1 points • pokemon_master9485
SanDisk 1TB Extreme microSDXC UHS-I Memory Card with Adapter - $182 ($267 off)
SanDisk 512GB Extreme PRO SDXC UHS-I Card - $119 ($50 off)
1 points • socoprime
https://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Extreme-microSDXC-Memory-Adapter/dp/B07P9W5HJV/ref=sr_1_3?dchild=1&keywords=1tb+sd+card&qid=1599358907&sr=8-3
https://www.bestbuy.com/site/sandisk-extreme-plus-1tb-microsdxc-uhs-i-memory-card/6348584.p?skuId=6348584
1 points • CaspianX2
100GB? That's cute. If we're looking to make this expensive, get the 1TB MicroSDXC Card (Not currently in stock).
Also, if we're tacking on dollars to the order, you'll want to add a glass screen protector (you should get one of these anyway), a case, maybe some alternate-style controllers to fit certain niches (the 8BitDo SN30 Pro+, the Nintendo Switch Online Super Nintendo Controller, a GameCube-style wireless pad, etc.). Oh, while we're talking about that, you'll want a Nintendo Switch Online yearly membership.
Planning on playing Smash or GRID? Then get a GameCube controller adapter and some GameCube controllers. Fan of fighting games or an authentic arcade experience? You could drop a few hundred on a pro fighting game stick.
Are you the collector type? Well, there are countless Joycon colors to collect, as well as hundreds of Amiibo figurines.
You'll probably need a USB hub or two to connect and charge all of your stuff, maybe you'll want a portable charger to power the Switch on the go, maybe a conducive stylus for designing Mario Maker levels, some extra Switch docks for every TV in your house and one to bring with you on the go (that'll set you back plenty), some extra charging stands for all your excess Joycons.
And this is just the stuff that isn't worthless trash, like the worthless plastic steering wheels for Mario Kart (though you can drop $100 on an actual steering wheel), and it's not counting all of the knick-knacks and related merch.
1 points • LikeALincolnLog42
Ummm... the same amount? 25,000.
That’d be 25 petabytes in one milk jug for $6.475 million. ($259.99 per card)
But if you bought 400 GB cards at only $57.99 each, you could buy 44 petabytes for the same price. You would need 5 milk jugs though to hold the 116k cards.
SanDisk 1TB Extreme MicroSDXC UHS-I Memory Card with Adapter - A2, U3, V30, 4K UHD, Micro SD - SDSQXA1-1T00-GN6MA https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07P9W5HJV/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_iQluEbW4E1G8M
SanDisk Ultra 400GB microSDXC UHS-I card with Adapter - SDSQUAR-400G-GN6MA https://www.amazon.com/dp/B074RNRM2B/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_EQluEbTA68PS7
1 points • GreenNapster
Deal link: Amazon
^^Note: ^^Get ^^instantly ^^notified ^^on ^^Telegram ^^when ^^there ^^is ^^a ^^new ^^deal ^^in ^^"Build ^^A ^^PC" ^^category. ^^Join ^^our ^(Telegram channel)
1 points • 1DonBot
24hr offer on the 1TB sandisk - price reduced to $183
What's with that?
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07P9W5HJV/ref=ord_cart_shr?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1&smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER
2 points • qwertylerqw
1) Save data is saved on the Switch’s internal storage even if the game itself is downloaded to the SD card, so you won’t lose that no matter what.
It doesn’t matter if your PC is a bit dated. All you need is a microSD card reader to copy the files. It also is easiest on a Windows PC. Mac and Linux will require additional steps
If it is Windows then you can just copy the Nintendo folder to your PC then copy it to the new SD card.
You could also just redownlaod all your games to the new SD card
The only other things saved to the SD card are screenshots/videos. They can be copied to the internal storage by going to System Settings -> Data Management -> Manage Screenshots and Videos -> microSD Card -> Copy All Screenshots and videos to System Memory
2) I’m pretty sure that there are only two companies with 1TB microSD cards (Sandisk and apparently Micron).
Personally I would go with Sandisk, but it’s also quite expensive. Are you sure that you need that much? I think most people would be just fine with a maximum of 512GB
If you want to get a smaller capacity card then I recommend either the Sandisk Ultra or Samsung Evo Select.
Also, don’t purchase microSD card from third-party seller (especially the 1TB one). SD cards are infamous for people selling fake SD cards that are smaller than what they appear to be.
On Amazon just make sure it says “Ships from and Sold by Amazon”
1 points • DisinhibitionEffect
I've owned like four Sansa SanDisk E200 series MP3 players. Their default capacity ranges from 2 GB to 8 GB, but they have a microSD slot and excellent Rockbox support. I love it. It struggles with lossless files sometimes, and I do miss Bluetooth, but I like the tactile buttons (most modern DAPs are touch-only), and the Rockbox interface.
You could buy an E250 refurbished on eBay for $20-50, plus a 1 TB microSDXC card for about $250 on sale, flash the player with Rockbox, and you should be good to go. I think. I don't actually have a 1 TB SD card laying around to try it, those suckers are expensive.
Not to shill, but I heard that the SanDisk 1TB Extreme microSDXC is a pretty great card. I use the 32 GB variant for most of my devices. The 1 TB variant is currently on sale for $250, down from $450. Too pricey for my needs!
https://www.jeffgeerling.com/blog/2019/raspberry-pi-microsd-card-performance-comparison-2019
1 points • Hoody_Weather
Thanks for the reply, and the link sir, or mam.
https://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Extreme-microSDXC-Memory-Adapter/dp/B07P9W5HJV/ref=sr_1_3?dchild=1&keywords=1tb+micro+sd+card&qid=1598830247&sr=8-3
I've had plenty of luck with SanDisk. $233.99 is mad expensive.
Looks like the Samsung EVO only comes in 512GB and nothing higher.
https://www.samsung.com/us/computing/memory-storage/memory-cards/evo-plus-microsdxc-memory-card-512gb-mb-mc512ha-am/
There's the PNY 1GB -
https://www.pny.com/pro-elite-class-10-u3-v30-microsd-flash-memory-card
Total$229.99
Would like to know which SD card is better? I feel like it's all preference, and they ALL work just the same.
I don't think I've ever heard of wish.com before. Hope it's a reliable place?
1 points • Deckardzz
My verdict: This card has no speed rating other than the obsolete "class 10" rating, which is extremely slow by current standards and requirements. In fact, it's so obsolete, that an entirely new class system has since been developed and this is no longer used, other than to be there for people to know it's certified for older devices which specified the memory must be "class 10."
Here's how big of a difference it is, and how slow "class 10" is now in today's standards...
- Class speeds: "One's" of MB/s of the minimum steady stream write/save data (Class 2 = 2 MB/s, Class 6 = 6 MB/s)
- Class 10 speed = 10 MB/s
- UHS speed class: "Tens" of MB/s of the minimum steady stream write/save data (Class 1 = 10 MB/s, Class 3 = 30 MB/s)
- UHS-1 speed (U1) = 10 MB/s
- UHS-3 speed (U3) = 30 MB/s
- V speed class: Actual number of MB/s of the guaranteed minimum sustained performance for recording video / steady stream write/save data (Class 30 = 30 MB/s, Class 60 = 60 MB/s)
- V30 speed = 30 MB/s
- V60 speed = 60 MB/s
- V90 speed = 90 MB/s
- Application Performance Class: At least 10 MB/s and a minimum IOPS (input/output operations per second) for reading and writing, determining whether apps stored on an SD card can be accessed without latency and delays between operations to read and write multiple times in succession
- A1 speed = 1500 read IOPS and 500 write IOPS
- A2 speed = 4000 read IOPS and 2000 write IOPS
Here's a nice chart: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SD_card#Class
(See also Speed)
What's important about speed ratings vs speed claims is that flash memory might be capable of 50 MB/s read and 40 MB/s write speeds, but not be capable of being certified for sustained 20 MB/s write speeds (claimed 40, not even certified of 20 at a sustained rate, which is necessary for video), hence only having a class 10 rating, certifying that it's capable of just 10 MB/s sustained write speeds. In that case, it might only reach 40 MB/s write speeds for an extremely short duration, such as one tenth of a second or even 10 seconds, meaning that if you attempt to save video onto the memory, it will stop working after either 1/10th of a second or after 10 seconds. That's why the above certifications are important.
How to find a microSD card
Here's how I would approach this..
In brief:
- First, assess what the minimum requirements are, and what is wanted to meet your goal (size, speed, reliability, etc.) and explore available options.
- Second, to check this item specifically, check for reviews of other items of this brand, and check the seller reviews and ratings.
- Third, scan/analyze this item and other items from the seller using available online tools that assess the legitimacy of the ratings/reviews and also show price history.
- Fourth, check other legitimate websites that sell items like this to see if any sell it. Start with Google Shopping perhaps, then some individual stores, like B&H, Newegg, Microcenter, Bestbuy, Walmart, then also Target (and make sure it's items sold by those store, not other sellers selling through those stores.)
- Fifth, check for reviews on YouTube and search the web in general for the specific brand. See if it's bigger, more known channels making reviews of this brand. See if anyone is includes the brand in a review of fake memory cards.
In more detail:
Step 1. Consider minimum requirements and what meets your goal:
- A. Minimum write speed (U rating, V rating, Class rating)
- B. Minimum read speed (usually not an issue as it's almost always higher than write speed)
- C. Standard vs High-Endurance memory needed (things that constantly write and re-write data, like dashcams, require high-endurance memory cards as standard cards are not designed for it and will fail prematurely with the amount of writing and re-writing data required for that use.)
- D. Capacity (storage space)
- E. Consider the actual usage: if it's for a phone and you know dumping most of the contents of your SD card every year is what can work for you, and you know you typically save less than 30 GB per year of pictures and video per year, and you're getting a new phone that takes pictures and video at higher resolution, thus higher file size - say twice the size per picture and video, then consider that a you might now use 60 GB per year with your new device, so a 128 GB card would be plenty of capacity with some extra buffer. (Also consider that the phone might store other data there, so you wouldn't want to get an outdated card that is only available at much slower speeds too, so yet another reason to not get small card, like 32 GB or 64 GB.)
- F. Consider the 'sweet spot' price per GB of cards. Don't just look up one size, like 128 GB, and buy it. The prices might be nearly the same for double the size. For example, the prices (of these non-endurance microSDXC flash memory cards) could look like this:
-- 32 GB for $8 Samsung Evo Select 32 U1 only U1 speed
-- 64 GB for $11 Samsung Evo Select 64 U3 (GA price: $25)
-- 128 GB for $20 Samsung Evo Select 128 U3 (GA price: $29)
-- 256 GB for $30 Samsung Evo Select 256 * (GA price: $50)
-- 400 GB for $75 SanDisk Extreme 400 C10, U3, V30, 4K, A2 ratings
-- 512 GB for $80 Samsung Evo Select 512 (GA price: $130)
-- 512 GB for $75 SanDisk Extreme 512 C10, U3, V30, 4K, A2 ratings
-- 1 TB for $230 SanDisk Extreme 1TB C10, U3, V30, 4K, A2 ratings
(Note - these are real prices gathered on November 23, 2020, using mostly Samsung Select EVO cards for a single-brand comparison, except for a one or two options. I contacted Samsung and learned that models ending in "HA" are models made/marketed for Amazon and are identical to the models ending in "GA," with no differences other than the model number. I suppose this is just to allow Amazon a lower price and to prevent Samsung and the brick and mortar stores from losing more money from selling the identical GA models through non-Amazon stores by preventing price matching since "the model numbers are different." (That sounds pretty sketchy.) Where both models exist, I list the GA pricing at the end, and for anyone on mobile, I'll make the GA price a link to it on Amazon in case you are in a brick and mortar store and want to price-match.)
Step 2. Since there are no or few reviews, check other products of the same brand for reviews:
-
A. In Amazon, click the brand link below the name of the item and narrow by category to the left to find others of the same brand and check them for reviews. Choose the products that are the most similar.
-
B. For this example, this product you asked about that has no reviews is similar to these other products by the same company:
-- SUPERDUODUO 256GB Micro SD Memory Card (Class 10)
--SUPERDUODUO 128GB Micro SD Card (Class 10)
- C. Check the ratings for the seller on the Amazon seller's page. For the example you provided, that's:
I didn't finish writing this up because it's taken a lot of time so far and I need to sleep.
To be continued... maybe..
(Maybe I'll turn this into its own post to help people shop.)