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12th October 2006
SanDisk Introduces 2-Gigabyte microSD Cards in Japan to Coincide with New Mobile Phones from NTT DoCoMo


Release Issued by SanDisk:

Originally Invented by SanDisk, microSD Memory Cards Are Now the Top Choice of Handset Makers Worldwide -- Used in Half of All New Models With Card Slots

YOKOHAMA, Japan--SanDisk® Corporation announced today that it will begin selling 2-gigabyte(1) (GB) microSD™ cards --the largest capacity of the world’s smallest removable flash memory – in Japan starting October 25. This will coincide with the introduction of new microSD-compatible handsets from NTT DoCoMo and other mobile phone carriers between now and the end of the year.

With these new models, which include DoCoMo’s FOMATM 903i series, there are now, worldwide, well over 300 new handsets available or announced that have slots for the microSD card. According to an analysis by SanDisk, 49 percent of the latest mobile phones that have memory card slots are using the microSD format, making it the preferred memory card of manufacturers and mobile network operators. In second place is the miniSD™ card, with 24 percent of handsets.

“Considering the fact that SanDisk created microSD just two years ago, these statistics show a very quick adoption rate of this form factor by the mobile phone industry,” said Yoram Cedar, SanDisk’s executive vice president of handset business and corporate engineering. “SanDisk pioneered the use of specialized memory cards for mobile phones and was the first to announce a 2-gigabyte capacity for the microSD card.”

The industry is rapidly shifting to the microSD card as the format of choice for mobile phones. Seven major Japanese handset producers now offer phones with microSD slots, and four of the top five largest manufacturers in the world also support microSD in their latest models.

Content is driving the demand for higher capacity flash memory cards in mobile phones. Users can store music, games, digital still images and videos on SanDisk 2GB microSD cards. Apart from handsets, microSD cards also can be used in some digital audio players, such as SanDisk’s Sansa™ e200 series. As an example of storage, a 2GB microSD card can hold up to 500 MP3 songs.(2)

With SanDisk adapters, microSD cards can be “stepped up” to fit into a variety of other electronics devices that have miniSD and SD slots. In line with the release of the 2GB microSD card, SanDisk Japan is offering various capacities of microSD cards in a Mobile Memory Kit. Each kit includes both miniSD and SD adapters as well as the flash card itself, so that consumers can select the appropriate card for their use without being influenced by card size.

“This allows use of a microSD card in any device that is part of the SD family,” said Cedar. “It’s our way of giving consumers the greatest flexibility.”

SanDisk Japan also announced that it is adding the 1GB microSD card to its mobile card lineup. Apart from the two highest capacities, the Mobile Memory Kit also comes in 256 megabytes (MB) and 512MB.

MicroSD cards were developed in 2004 by SanDisk as TransFlash™. Last year, the SD Card Association approved its specification as the microSD memory card, thus creating a new standard. microSD cards are one-fourth the size of standard SD cards and are about the size of a fingernail (15mm x 11mm x 1mm). SanDisk manufactures its own NAND flash memory at a facility shared with partner Toshiba at Yokkaichi, near Nagoya. The two companies this summer announced a business venture to build a fourth fabrication plant that is scheduled for completion next year.

SanDisk is the original inventor of flash storage cards and is the world’s largest supplier of flash data storage card products, using its patented, high-density flash memory and controller technology. SanDisk is headquartered in Milpitas, California, and has operations worldwide, with more than half its sales outside the U.S. The head office of SanDisk Corporation Japan is located in Yokohama City.

(1) 1 megabyte (MB) equals 1 million bytes; 1 gigabyte (GB) equals 1 billion bytes.
(2) Approximation based on 4 minute songs at 128 kbps MP3 (3,932,160 bytes/song).

SanDisk’s web site/home page address: www.sandisk.com

 
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