There are also miniature hard drives (Microdrives) with almost the same form factor as CF cards (CF type II, 5mm thick)) which are available in capacities from 340MB to 4GB.
CF Type II: cards and devices that are 9mm high. Type I devices are all solid state but Type II devices include the new IBM Microdrive, a miniature, rotating hard drive. and check here: Flash Memory Cards/Readers ...
CF Type I the original 5mm high card CF Type II cards and devices that are 9mm high. Type I devices are all solid state but Type II devices include the new IBM Microdrive, a miniature, rotating hard drive.
Compact Flash Card. A memory storage card of the Compact Flash standard. CF Type I is a 5mm high solid state card, while CF Type II is a 9mm high solid state or Microdrive card. Chroma The value of saturation + hue of a pixel; its colour.
Unknown if CF type I (thin) or II (fat). Lexar 4GB 40x (no one really uses cards this big, and this 4GB card is physically too fat [CF type II] to fit in smaller cameras, and oddly this 40x is four times the price of the 80x above) ...
Back on January 31st FujiFilm announced the S1 Pro, people ooh-ed and ahh-ed at the specifications, 6.13 megapixels, accepts Nikon F-mount lenses, ISO from 320 to 1600 support for CF Type II and SmartMedia with an estimated street price of just US$3, ...
Rewritable removable memory or function card developed by SanDisk in 1994. In contrast with SmartMedia or xD-Picture Card technology, it has a built-in controller. The newer CF type II (CF/2) cards are 5 mm thick, the CF type I are only 3.3 mm thick.
You should also be aware that there are compatibility issues; even though they should work in any CF type II compatible camera, in reality, they don't, so check with your camera's manufacturer if they are supported.
See also: CF, Type, Image, Camera, CF type i
 
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