Word: compactflash
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...take a lot of pictures, and was happy to see that the PS3 came with card readers for not just Sony's Memory Stick, but the more popular SD and CompactFlash as well. You can move photos from memory card to hard drive and back to memory card. I have never seen a device scroll through high-resolution photos faster than the PS3, certainly never blown up on a 46-in. monitor. It even renders your photos in realtime into a 3D animated slideshow, if you so desire...
...suppose that's just an unfortunate price to pay for the added functionality of live view. Add that to a list of features - full manual control, ultrasonic dust protection, a 7.5-megapixel image sensor, access to all of Olympus' Zuiko Digital Specific lenses, and compatibility with high-capacity CompactFlash memory cards as well as the Olympus/Fujifilm proprietary xD card - and you can see why this camera has plenty to brag about...
...Replay binoculars ($600) let you do exactly that. As you peer through the lens, you can push a shutter button to capture up to 30 sec. of continuous footage. Then you can watch the video on a 2-in. LCD screen that flips open on top. The 16-MB CompactFlash card that comes with the glasses stores up to 2.5 min. of video or 150 still images. Want to give your friends a peek? Hook the binoculars to your PC with the USB cable, e-mail the video file and make everyone jealous...
...Sony PictureStation DPP-EX50 (available in March for $180) has a longer, slimmer, rectangular profile and lets you insert MemoryStick or CompactFlash cards into slots on the device. While the DPP-EX50 takes longer to print each image (about 80 seconds in TIME's tests vs. 50 seconds for the P-10), the results were just as impressive. But unlike the P-10, the DPP-EX50 gives you the option of hooking up to your TV, via the yellow Video In port, for onscreen editing of images. There's even a program for adding borders, designs and text to your...
Gaidano has no plans to expand the company beyond 40 employees or take it public. DriveSavers works so well, he says, precisely because it is small and nimble. Beyond acquiring expertise in new drive types--such as the CompactFlash cards used in digital cameras and the tiny drives in Apple's iPod--there is no need to diversify. Everyone seems happy with their compensation. Why bother to grow? CBL's CEO, Bill Margeson, currently expanding into Europe and Australia, says Gaidano and his troops are beholden to the Hollywood crowd and "haven't taken the initiative...