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Storage
Scribble Flash Mate
Don Bradbury looks at a new five-way memory
card reader
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Info |
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Product |
Flash Mate
memory card reader |
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Manufacturer |
Scribble
and Palmtec Ltd |
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Web site |
www.scribblePDA.com
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Price |
£47.95
incl |
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Rating |
9 |
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We like |
Choice of
card ports; built-in memory |
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We don’t
like |
Pidgin
English user leaflet |
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If you have any devices that use flash memory, such
as a digital camera or PDA for example, you’ll appreciate the
versatility that a multi-function memory card reader such as the
Scribble Flash Mate can offer. That’s because this one can handle
Compact Flash (including, significantly, the IBM Microdrive) and
3.3volt Smart Media as well as MultiMedia and Secure Digital cards.
So the only flash memory in common use that isn’t accommodated is
the Sony Memory Stick.
While the latter is sometimes used in non-Sony
hardware, its omission might not be so important to you. The others
are gaining ground, and it might be important to have a reader with
the capability to handle them all.
Flash drive
This Scribble device also has built-in memory, the
so-called Flash Disk. The example we were provided with had 16MB,
but a range from 16 to 128MB is indicated, and since such storage
capacity could be used like any other removable disk drive, it could
come in handy.
The Scribble device is very small (9.5 x 6 x 1cm)
and therefore portable, even coming equipped with a soft black pouch
to carry it in (a vest pocket would seem suitable). That’s made
possible because, while the reader comes with an attached USB cable,
that cable is deliberately kept very short (8cm); short enough, in
fact, to tuck into a slot along the top edge of the unit during
transportation.
If plugging such a short cable into your PC leaves
the drive slots inaccessible, there’s a USB extension cable in the
box providing a 90cm stand-off. That should be more than adequate
for virtually all users.
Installation
A non-circular CD is provided bearing drivers. No
reason for a CD to be circular, of course, but be prepared for a
change of tone as your drive spins up, presumably due to a different
air flow. Anyway, it carries drivers for Windows 98, 98SE, 2000, and
XP as well as Mac OS 8.6 or above. Windows ME doesn’t need driver
installation; you just plug the thing in and it’s ready.
Under
Windows 98, we had to point to the D:\Win98 folder on the CD, to
install first USB_MSD.INF and then USB_PORT.INF, giving three
additional drives and one new USB device in System Manager.
Hot-swappable for both cards and device, as you’d
expect, the Flash Mate gives USB 1.0 data transfer rates. That’s
perfectly adequate for a duty such as this. Only if you had hundreds
of big JPGs on a Microdrive, say, would you anticipate a noticeable
performance boost from USB 2.0.
A user manual (leaflet) written in Pidgin English is
hardly sufficient to put one off as using this device is reasonably
simple. It comes across plainly enough that you cannot use both the
flash disk drive and a Smart Media card at the same time. The former
could be useful for carrying data between machines and you should
make sure you buy one with sufficient capacity.
So the flash disk - should you be confused over the
My Computer entries - is the first entry there provided you don’t
have a Smart Media card in its slot. If you look at its Properties
tab, you can confirm its built-in capacity, ie not added via one of
your memory cards.
In conclusion
The Scribble Flash Mate memory card reader is a neat
device, if just a little awkward during card insertion, and at the
price, a good buy. While the omission of a Sony Memory Stick slot
will be a significant omission for some, in all other respects it’s
nice to have these multiple options open when you come to buy
devices with variable flash memory types.
And while Flash Mate is a reader/writer - so you can
copy or transfer files from one attached card to another - it’s nice
to have some flash memory built in as alternative storage.
Next time we’ll be looking at a six-way card
reader, ie all the ones covered here plus Memory Stick.
Don Bradbury
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