Sony to launch flash cards with 125Mbps write speeds

The Japanese electronics giant will be the first to launch memory cards under the new XQD standard

Sony said Friday it will begin selling memory cards with write speeds of 125Mbps, the fastest in the industry, from February.

The new cards are the first to be announced under a new standard called XQD, a specification from the CompactFlash Assocation announced in December.

[ Stay up to date on the latest news in information technology with InfoWorld's Today's Headlines: First Look newsletter. ]

The cards are meant for working with data-heavy formats such as raw image and video data in high-end cameras, where write speed to memory is becoming a bottleneck as image sensors and processors become more advanced. Faster write times will mean less pause between pictures snapped in data-heavy formats such as RAW, and snappier editing for previously saved data.

Sony said it will launch 16GB and 32GB versions initially, as well as readers that work with USB 3.0 and PCI slots in computers. In Japan, the cards will have estimated prices of ¥20,000 ($260) and ¥33,000, while the readers will each cost ¥4,000 and are slated to go on sale Feb. 15.

A Sony spokesman said the products will also be released outside Japan on a similar time frame.

CompactFlash is an older rival to formats such as Secure Digital (SD) which is now widely used for storage in mainstream digital cameras, mobile phones, and personal computers.

Copyright © 2012 IDG Communications, Inc.