Re: Sony Memory Stick - what memory to use? On 4 May 2007 01:43:03 -0700, Pete L
<peterlavington@hotmail.com> wrote:
>I have a Sony Vaio laptop. It has a memory stick slot with the adaptor
>but no memory. I'm not clear what memory card to get for it. The Sony
>card itself seems to be about twice as expensive as any other generic
>type.
Yes, that's what happens when a proprietary technology is
used. It tends to make it a poor value to use a memory
stick unless forced to (already owned a camera that needed
it, for example).
>I only intend to use the memory stick just as an extra bit of
>room so as not use up space on the hard drive.
I have to wonder why. If your hard drive has insufficient
space on it, you might find it best to replace/upgrade the
hard drive. Depending on the age of the laptop and specs of
the original drive, this might also be a significant
performance upgrade, a laptop hard drive is often one of the
larger bottlenecks to common uses.
Flash memory is relatively expensive per capacity too, but
having a 2nd (drive) volume like this does gain one thing,
by putting your data on it instead of filling with only
static application files, you have a greater chance of
retaining data should the more-failure-prone hard drive were
to crash. Plus, being so easily removable it is easier to
move data back and forth to another system. While the same
could be said about a USB thumbdrive, it is a bit less
protected mechanically since it sticks out the side of a USB
socket - something placing it at more of a risk on a laptop
which could potentially be moved around while the flash
drive was plugged in, contrasted with a (stationary)
desktop.
>I was thinking of
>putting a large application, say Office, on a 2Gb card. Does this
>sound feasible/sensible and would it work as happily as it would if I
>put it on the main hard drive?
I would say it's most sensible if you have a special need
but you haven't mentioned any need that makes it a good
value or better than putting Office on the hard drive. I
would upgrade the hard drive first if lack of space is an
issue. If you had a need for smaller data sets you could
still compliment that hard drive with a smaller flash drive
of either type at a lower cost, or perhaps it isn't needed
at all if you have desktop at home and network them, it
becomes practically hassle-free to move data around.
I'm not suggesting it's necessarily a bad idea to use a
memory stick, but to store Office I don't see a good
price:benefit ratio and if your file stores are growing to
the point of running out of hard drive space, buying a small
flash drive may only be a short term solution, you may still
run out of space and then have to keep buying evermore flash
cards or still upgrade the hard drive. |