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Reddit mentions of SanDisk Ultra 32GB Class 10 SDHC UHS-I Memory Card up to 80MB/s (SDSDUNC-032G-GN6IN)
Sentiment score: 11
Reddit mentions: 34
We found 34 Reddit mentions of SanDisk Ultra 32GB Class 10 SDHC UHS-I Memory Card up to 80MB/s (SDSDUNC-032G-GN6IN). Here are the top ones.
Buying options
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- Great for compact to midrange point and shoot digital cameras and camcorders
- Twice as fast as ordinary SDHC cards, allowing you to take pictures and transfer files quickly
- Exceptional video recording performance with Class 10 rating for Full HD video (1080p)
- Quick transfer speeds up to 80MB/s and WaterProof, temperature Proof, X ray Proof, magnet Proof, shockproof
- SanDisk Ultra SDXC and SDHC UHS I Memory Cards are compatible with SDHC/SDXC enabled and SDHC I/SDXC I UHS I enabled devices
Features:
Specs:
Color | GRAY |
Height | 0.09 Inches |
Length | 1.24 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Release date | November 2018 |
Size | 32GB |
Weight | 0.0440924524 pounds |
Width | 0.94 Inches |
SanDisk 32GB Ultra Class 10 SDHC UHS-I Memory Card Up to 80MB, Grey/Black (SDSDUNC-032G-GN6IN) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0143RT8OY/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_ggmzzbDW0KYPT
I'm surprised how well priced the 1080p TVs are nowadays. 1 2
And these memory cards are really cheap compared to how much storage you can get 1 2 3
And this Xbox One 500GB Console - Gears of War: Ultimate Edition Bundle is really cheap $200.
A lot of these deals are similar to the week of black friday.
For starters, I'd be glad to help you find the right camcorder!
Here is an option:
For attaching the mic, slide the included detachable cold shoe mount into the slot at the rear of the camera until it clicks, slide the mic into the cold shoe and tighten the knob to secure it in place. For attaching the LED light, screw the bar into the bottom of the camera and attach the LED light to the bar similar to attaching the mic.
If you have any other questions, do not hesitate to ask. I hope this helps!
Found this from one quick Google search: https://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Ultra-Class-Memory-SDSDUNC-032G-GN6IN/dp/B0143RT8OY/ref=lp_1197396_1_2?s=pc&ie=UTF8&qid=1472828621&sr=1-2 There's a cheaper one for 8,99, but this one is Class 10 while the cheaper one is Class 4.
Moving the saves over is pretty easy. You'll need to softmod your WiiU. It's only temporary and very easy to do. You just need an SD Card 32GB or less and a USB to SD Card adapter.
If you have games that you want play online, I'd also recommend dumping: your files needed for online, mii heads, and friends list app while you're at it.
Here's a video guide for that.
Now after having watched that video you should know what I'm talking about going forward:
You just need to open the homebrew launcher with the browser exploit and then launch 'Mocha CFW'. Then you'll be back at the homebrew menu. Now, launch 'SaveMii Mod' and then you can use that to dump all your savedata to the SD Card. Then you can plug the SD Card into your PC with a USB to SD Card Adapter and move the files into Cemu.
Here's a video showing how to use SaveMii Mod (start from 2:03).
Just remember to launch 'Mocha CFW' before launching 'SaveMii Mod'.
___
Then (obviously) you need to dump your game(s) from your WiiU to get them on your PC.
You can dump them with FTPiiu everywhere.
The 00050000 folder stores installed games.
The 0005000E folder stores installed updates.
The 0005000C folder stores installed DLC.
If it's a disc game, then you'll need to use DDD. Here's a video guide showing how to use it. Select the disc option.
But you'll still need to dump the DLC and updates with FTPiiu everywhere.
Pi Zero W $10 US: https://www.adafruit.com/product/3400
Pi Zero $5 US: https://www.adafruit.com/product/2885
2.5 Amp power supply that will run any Pi up to and including 3B+ (won't run the 4) $7.50 US: https://www.adafruit.com/product/1995
Sandisk 32 GB Ultra uSD card $6.79 US: https://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Ultra-Class-Memory-SDSDUNC-032G-GN6IN/dp/B0143RT8OY/ref=sr_1_2?keywords=sandisk+ultra+32gb&qid=1569500982&s=gateway&sr=8-2
Looks like that takes aux(3.5mm) , SD card and 1/4 inch, so you've got options.
Here's a CD player
SD Cards
According to Canon's website, the t3i can record about 22 minutes to an 8GB SD card. So a 32GB card should be about 88 minutes.
When shopping for an SD card I would always suggest a name brand for reliability. For your specific camera, any card labeled SD/SDHC/SDXC should be compatible. For shooting 1080P video you want at least Class 10 speeds (the little C with a 10 in it). Faster cards are still backwards compatible.
I would suggest something like this SanDisk 32GB Class 10. And I'd probably buy a couple, you never want to be without a spare card!
Lighting
I'm no expert when it comes to video lighting, I only do photography, and even then I'm not an expert. But as a techie, before buying expensive lights, I would just try to use some LED light bulbs in those stands you already have as they're a standard lamp socket, to get more light and less heat.
Perhaps something like these 20W bulbs? You can try any bulb as long as it has an E26/E27 base is no more than 45 watts.
Something like these LED flood lights might work since they're directional, but they're probably too wide to fit with the umbrellas on.
Lenses
Getting that bokeh may be difficult. There are five factors that affect background blur, one of which is sensor size, obviously you're not going to buy a new camera, so the sensor size is a fixed value.
To get more background blur you need one or more of the following, a lower fstop on your lens, a higher focal length, to get as close to your subject as possible, and to get the background as far away as possible. So your desire for a wider lens is conflicting with your desire for background blur, and it sounds like space is an issue.
Additionally, since you have a crop sensor camera, lenses are really more zoomed (by 1.6x) in than they would be on a full frame sensor. So your kit lens, I assume goes down to 18mm? So on your camera that is more like 29mm (about the same as a smartphone camera).
I don't necessarily know if I would recommend a wide lens for your application since it will lead to less background blur and will exaggerate facial features when up close, as shown in this example. Although background blur may be impossible if you're in a cramped space anyhow. So if you're going to attempt a wide angle lens, the Canon EF-S 10-18mm f/4.5-5.6 looks like the best, most affordable option (I use Nikon gear myself, so I don't have personal experience), which is equivalent to a 16mm-29mm on your camera. However, that fstop number is higher than both your kit lens and 50mm, which means it lets in less light, which could be an issue.
Conclusion
Hopefully that information was useful and not too confusing. Feel free to ask for clarification if needed. Good luck!
I can confirm that this one worked for me with zero issues:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0143RT8OY/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o07_s01?ie=UTF8&psc=1
A good memory card always helps, e.g. this, that's big enough for approx. 1.1k shots at max quality on my d3300.
Also a remote shutter is useful if you have a tripod, or you just want to set the camera down and pose, the amazon basics model works great for me, here it is.
Those are two cheap essentials for me.
Camera body
camera lens
SD Card
It comes up to about $200, but if she's looking for a professional camera, that's really as low as I would go to when it comes to price.
>I have a 32 gig SD card for my 3ds, it was 20 dollars back then. Not an 8 gigabyte SD is 20 dollars.
Umm...
SD Card 32 Gigs
Micro SD Card 32 Gigs
EDIT: Oh uh and you didn't say how much space you wanted on the external
What size do you prefer? If you want to run smash brawl mods it needs to be 32gb, if you dont care you can go bigger.
You want it to be class 10 80mb/s
I use this one:
https://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Ultra-Class-Memory-SDSDUNC-032G-GN6IN/dp/B0143RT8OY/ref=sr_1_3?crid=2EM2BV1UMEHPZ&keywords=32gb+class+10+sd+card&qid=1557426185&s=gateway&sprefix=32+gb+class+10%2Caps%2C216&sr=8-3
That seems like a bad deal to me, I'd personally go with the Canon Refurbished T6i w/2-lens kit which is only $560, a major savings plus you get the same 1yr Canon warranty as if you'd purchased new. I've purchased through Canon Refurbished in the past and the lens I got works flawlessly and was in absolutely pristine condition, the only reason I would have known it wasn't new was the box it came in.
Snag a 32GB Sandisk Ultra (reputable company, fast card) for $14 and then buy other accessories as you need them. Boom, you saved nearly $250.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secure_Digital#/media/File:SD_card_unlocked_and_locked.svg
The SD card specification includes the lock notch, virtually every brand has them. Here are a few :)
number 1
number 2
Nothing I can think of, it's always worked fine at 1080p 30fps, I even tried resetting my camera settings to make sure it wasn't some obscure settings I forgot about.
I benchmarked the two cards I have on my person right now, This Class 10 Sandisk and This Class 4 Sandisk.
I tested both with a program called USBDeview. The Class 10 card clocked in at 12.65 MB/Sec, and the Class 4 card at 15.51 MB/s. So it looks like you're right and my dumb ass was wrong. Interestingly though, there's obviously a discrepancy between megabits and megabytes but even so, if USBDeview was in megabits the Class 10 should be 80Mb/s and the class 4 should be 32 Mb/s. If it's supposed to be in megabytes the Class 10 should be 10 MB/s and the Class 4 at 4 MB/s. So it seems like both cards aren't in good shape.
I was shooting video yesterday and got a similar issue happening on a friend's SD card (same as my Sandisk class 10) as well though. Maybe something's up with the camera body that's messing up cards?
I didn't know Sandisk had a warranty! I'm going to file a warranty claim and hopefully get a new card out of the deal. If that card shows the same issue then there's something real funky going on.
I was thinking of giving you gold for putting up with me being a dickhead but I know some people would rather that money go to charity. Is there a charity you'd like me to contribute to in your (user)name?
Get the CompactFlash adapter that was recommended ($7), but instead of a CompactFlash card, get an CF to SD adapter like this ($7.50). Then, just get an SD card of the capacity you want, for example a [16GB] (https://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Ultra-Class-Memory-SDSDUNC-032G-GN6IN/dp/B0143RT8OY/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1523574332&sr=8-3&keywords=sd+card+32gb&dpID=51cpb2WLteL&preST=_SY300_QL70_&dpSrc=srch) ($13). Plus the tools ($2). You will be spending $30 at most, being the actual SD card the most expensive item, and the procedure is not that difficult. If you happen to have an SD card lying around from an old phone or camera, so you could even do this for $17.
SD cards are pretty darn cheap these days.
You can get a 32GB SD card for like $7, and a 64GB for about $11.
https://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Ultra-Class-Memory-SDSDUNC-032G-GN6IN/dp/B0143RT8OY/
Honestly, it's worth it so you don't have to keep worrying about it.
Unless you're planning on stocking up on a bunch of eShop games, a 32GB SD card should do you just fine.
I'm just going to buy a 32 gb sd card because its prime day on amazon. Is this okay? https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B0143RT8OY/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1499747271&sr=1-1&psr=PDAY&pi=AC_SX236_SY340_QL65&keywords=sd+card&dpPl=1&dpID=51MMGGrKpkL&ref=plSrch
This would probably be better: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0143RT8OY
> good, high quality SD card. Make sure it's high endurance and not some generic Sandisk SD card
Such as what? Whats wrong with regular sandisk SD cards such as this? https://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Ultra-Class-Memory-SDSDUNC-032G-GN6IN/dp/B0143RT8OY/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1525218853&sr=8-3&keywords=sd+card
Micro for the New3 DS
Standard for 3DS
Honestly, these are just the first two I found at a good sale price at 32GB.
If you're willing to spend up to $20 for the SD card you can get similar 64GB models from the good brands:
(in no particular order) Samsung, SanDisk, Kingston, PNY, ADATA... theres other good brands, but I'd look at those first
For the cleaning kit, all she really needs is a rocket blower and some lens pens.
You can also get some disposable wipes.
These Sandisk SD cards should be plenty fast. They're not the absolute fastest that Sandisk makes anymore, which is why they're so cheap. (95mb/s vs 80mb/s. Not that big of a deal.)
Understanding Exposure has got to be the number 1 recommended book for the basics. It's an excellent book, but if she's already getting gigs, maybe she doesn't need it?
For posing, Picture Perfect Posing is the book to get.
This is all the cheap stuff. Lenses, bags, straps, lighting, and the other gear starts to get expensive. What kind of budget are you looking at? I know you said budget isn't an issue... but what does that mean? $500 for everything? $1000? $10,000?
I'm one of those people that carries a lot of DSLR gear with me. I take a Nikon D800 and 3-4 lenses. You can check out my most recent travel album here. Photography is my passion, so I can't bring myself to take less. I love it and want to take loads of pictures. So for me, it makes sense. However, to anyone not into photography like I am, it isn't what I advise.
I recommend that you don't get a DSLR. If you're not very comfortable/familiar with shooting a DSLR, you'll use it on auto a lot. If you're using it on auto, you're paying too much for the camera you're getting. Instead, get a smaller/compact micro 4/3 sensor. They can let you change lenses (like a DSLR), have good quality, are small, cheap, and still take excellent quality photos for Internet use (they won't print as big as some DLSRs can, but that's rarely done with travel photos and your average traveler). They won't be as good in low-lighting, but that will be a non-issue for many.
In your price range, I recommend the Olympus PEN E-PL6 Digital Camera with 14-42mm II Lens. It comes with a zoom lens range that will be good for travel; you'll be able to do landscapes or walk-about shots in cities. It won't zoom far out, but you could buy another lens for that. However, I find that zooming far out is rarely done in my travels so I don't plan my setups around that rare need. A recent post with good pics using this camera can be seen here.
I would then get TWO 32 GB memory cards. Back them up often to your PC (if you're taking one).
Get a very small travel tripod. It won't be perfect for all situations, but it's better than none and it's very easy to travel with. If you want a night shot, you'll need a tripod. Or if you want to do a selfie that doesn't look like a selfie, put the camera on a timer and go stand in front of it on the tripod. It's cheap and light and adds more options.
Lastly, get some kind of camera bag that can hold all of your camera equipement + a laptop/tablet. It's nice to keep everything together, they usually have lots of pockets to store caps, SD cards, misc items, etc that are easy to lose in general travel luggage.
All of this should be within your budget and you'll get great photos out of it.
Even if buying from SanDisk directly?
Didn’t know there was much of a difference in SD cards but I found out it’s good to have smaller ones than one large one in case of failure etc
SanDisk Ultra 32GB Class 10 SDHC UHS-I Memory Card up to 80MB/s (SDSDUNC-032G-GN6IN) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0143RT8OY/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_HWZLDbKTHD4WG
How's this one? https://www.amazon.ca/Sandisk-Ultra-Class-Memory-SDSDUNC-032G-GN6IN/dp/B0143RT8OY/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=sd+card+32gb+large&qid=1571091158&s=electronics&sr=1-1
SanDisk 32GB Ultra Class 10 SDHC UHS-I Memory Card Up to 80MB, Grey/Black (SDSDUNC-032G-GN6IN)
Should this one work well enough?
Generally speaking, any SD card will work. However, if it's too slow, you might not be able to record video for very long, and writing images to the card might take longer.
That said, the T6 isn't a particularly demanding camera for SD cards. A card like this won't limit the camera in any way, and is quite affordable.
You might also want to pick up a few accessories. I personally would suggest getting a lens hood. They help prevent flare, and can even slightly protect your lens against impacts from the front. There's no reason to buy the official ones, though. Here's a third party one that will work on your lens, and is way cheaper than the Canon one.
You might also want a tripod, so you can play around with long exposures and low light shooting. It doesn't really make sense for you to buy anything super fancy at this point. I've heard good things about the Amazon Basics one, and it's less than $20.
Beyond that, you might want a camera bag. I don't really know much about what is out there right now, but there should be plenty of options. It might be a good idea to go to your local electronics store and try out a few, since you want to make sure that it's comfortable.
Let me know if you have any other questions, and good luck shooting!
So would an SD card like this work?
Would this work stock?
Thank you!
Will this SDcard work? http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B010Q57T02?psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=ox_sc_act_title_1&smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER
Does it uses a micro SD card or a normal SD card? If normal size would this one work?
http://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Ultra-Class-Memory-SDSDUNC-032G-GN6IN/dp/B0143RT8OY/ref=sr_1_1?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1457904229&sr=1-1&keywords=SD+card+class+10
Thats the fastest rating for an SD card.
They would probably use something more like this, which says up to 80 MB/s.
http://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Ultra-Class-Memory-SDSDUNC-032G-GN6IN/dp/B0143RT8OY/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1462654136&sr=8-2&keywords=32+gb+sd+card
Will 32gb work?
https://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Ultra-Class-Memory-SDSDUNC-032G-GN6IN/dp/B0143RT8OY/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1510933044&sr=8-3&keywords=sandisk+sd+card+32gb
These are good, reasonably fast, come with a lifetime warranty and are the most popular SD card on Amazon. The 16gb version is under $10