PC Cards (PCMCIA) were among first
commercial memory card
formats (type I cards) to come out in the 1990s, but are now mainly used in
industrial applications and to connect I/O devices such as modems.
In 1990s, a number of memory card formats
smaller than PC Card arrived, including CompactFlash, SmartMedia, and Miniature
Card. The desire for smaller cards for cell-phones, PDAs, and compact digital
cameras drove a trend that left the previous generation of
"compact" cards looking big. In digital cameras SmartMedia and
CompactFlash had been very successful, in 2001 SM alone captured 50% of the
digital camera market and CF had a stranglehold on professional digital
cameras.
By 2005 however, SD/MMC had nearly taken
over SmartMedia's spot, though not to the same level and with stiff competition
coming from Memory Stick variants, as well as CompactFlash. In industrial
fields, even the venerable PC card (PCMCIA) memory cards still manage to
maintain a niche, while in mobile phones and PDAs, the memory card market was
highly fragmented until 2010 when micro-SD came to dominate new high-end phones
and tablet computers.
Since 2010 new products of Sony (previously
only using Memory Stick) and Olympus (previously only using XD-Card) are
offered with an additional SD-Card slot.[1] Effectively the format war has
turned in SD-Card's favor.
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