- #Usb to sd card adapter for macbook air upgrade#
- #Usb to sd card adapter for macbook air full#
- #Usb to sd card adapter for macbook air free#
#Usb to sd card adapter for macbook air upgrade#
Internal ssd upgrade is always the faster option but its expensive also people don’t like dropping there mac off for a couple days or risk messing up their mac DIY-ing it. I have a 2TB 2.5″ usb3 drive handy most of the time for backups and movies though. Includes a nifty little usb3 case for the old internal drive, so perfect for a backup or extra storage :) Personally I’m cool with 512GB though, I can’t see needing terabytes and terabytes of storage on a laptop, but on a desktop, sure. A bargain for a pci-e SSD that reads/writes over 555mb/s. Going from 256GB to 480GB pci-e SSD is a $285 upgrade, but it’s well worth it considering those drives are insanely fast, well over 550mb/s write/read speeds on those. They are for a different market than your average casual laptop user or gamer, so $2,600 is a bargain for what you’re getting, if Macbooks are your thing, which they don’t appear to be. These have pci-e flash internal storage, that crap is not cheap either.
#Usb to sd card adapter for macbook air full#
Also, keep in mind these laptops are thin, so there isn’t room for massive heatsinks and fans and raid0 dual full 2.5″ sata drives. 256GB internal pci-e SSD + 256GB SDXC card, not that bad on a 15″ Retina MBP.
#Usb to sd card adapter for macbook air free#
The JetDrive Lites are priced aggressively with current rates starting at just $39.99 for 64GB and going up to $79.99 for 128GB.Īlso late to the party, but I just got a PNY Elite 256GB SDXC card, 90mb/s write/read, for $90 with free shipping on Amazon, soooo…. Obviously, there isn’t any real world data to backup these claims yet and overall performance will also vary by Mac, it is still nice to see Transcend attempting to push the product category forward. Transcend says that users can expect read and write speeds of up to 95MB/s and 60MB/s respectively, which is the fastest of the bunch. Just this morning Transcend announced its JetDrive Lite expansion cards in 64GB and 128GB capacities. It retails for $59.99, but is currently on sale for $49.99. Some people may dislike the fact that the pull tab has ‘SanDisk’ branded on it, but that doesn’t seem like a deal-breaker to me.
The SanDisk minidrive is only available in 64GB, and it includes a pull tab to make it even easier to remove. It comes in two different capacities (64GB/128GB), is colored black, and protrudes just enough to make it easy to remove. The most well-known version is the PNY StorEDGE. The memory expansion modules we’re going to take a look at are customized to fit nearly flush.
It’s also an eyesore to constantly have a card peaking out from your Mac’s otherwise seamless and uniform design. The problem with shoving any SD card into your MacBook is that is protrudes out from the laptop casing, which leaves the card and your Mac vulnerable to damage or getting knocked out.