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If you use a Micro SD memory card you will need this!

If you use a Micro SD memory card you will need this!

I’ve tried countless cheap USB card readers, but so far they’ve all been crappy!

If you use a Micro SD memory card you will need this!

I don’t like bulky, battery card readers, and I often need it to be able to read a memory card from a camera, a camera, or just a drone through the USB port, instead of having to connect external hardware to the machine with a cable. I’m not lying, I’ve tried a thousand and one solutions that look good in the pictures, but so far each has gone so that when the newer piece came, the old one went in the trash.

High Speed ​​USB 2.0 Micro SD TF T Flash Memory Card Reader Adapter 2

Sometime two weeks ago, I caught my eye on a reader again, and since it cost only 99 cents, or about 250 forints, I thought I would order one. The package arrived today, and to my greatest surprise, not another crappy thing fell out of the envelope, but a reader with a fair-looking, fair-touch, metal-body. As you can see in the pictures, it is easy to use. When removing the metal cap, insert the USB connector, under which the memory card should be inserted under the middle part containing the contacts. This gives you a tiny flash drive that is essentially the same as the capacity of the card.

High Speed ​​USB 2.0 Micro SD TF T Flash Memory Card Reader Adapter 3

According to the factory data - as the color of the USB connector shows - this is a USB 2.0 device, which is far from the lightning speed, in theory 480 Mbps. Of course, it supports all kinds of operating systems, as the USB standard is just that. A micro SD / HC card with a maximum capacity of 64 GB can be inserted in the reader.

You can find the reader here for 99 cents, or 250 forints: High Speed ​​USB 2.0 Micro SD TF T-Flash Memory Card Reader Adapter

 

About the Author

s3nki

Owner of the HOC.hu website. He is the author of hundreds of articles and thousands of news. In addition to various online interfaces, he has written for Chip Magazine and also for the PC Guru. For a time, he ran his own PC shop, working for years as a store manager, service manager, system administrator in addition to journalism.