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<H2>It's OK to boil your memory card: official</H2>
<DIV class=Byline>By <A
href="http://forms.theregister.co.uk/mail_author/?story_url=/2004/08/02/memory_breaking_project/">Lucy
Sherriff</A></DIV>
<DIV class=Date><SMALL><FONT size=2>Published Monday 2nd August 2004
13:32 GMT</FONT></SMALL></DIV>
<DIV id=Body>
<P>If you ever want to destroy a digital camera’s memory card, don’t bother
putting it through the wash or hitting it with a sledgehammer as neither will
guarantee destruction.</P>
<P>According to a <CITE>Digital Camera Shopper</CITE> magazine investigation
cited on <CITE>The Beeb</CITE>, five of the main memory card formats -
CompactFlash, Secure Digital, xD, Memory Stick and Smartmedia - will happily
hang on to your data despite being boiled, washed, dunked in cola, run over with
a skateboard and worse: being given to a six-year old who was instructed to
destroy the cards</P>
<P>The xD card and the SmartMedia card even survived being hit with a
sledgehammer and nailed to a tree, although it did take a data retrieval expert
to get the photographs out.</P>
<P>Staff at DCS expressed their amazement: “We knew modern memory cards were
durable, but had no idea they would be quite so tough." quoth editor Geoff
Harris. He suggests that the UK’s 18 million digital photographers should still
back up their pictures, presumably in case of the card being struck by lightning
during a tornado which has driven a nail through the memory card and thrown it
two miles into an inconveniently-sited blast furnace.</P>
<P><CITE>The BBC</CITE> report does not say why the staff at DCS felt the need
to abuse defenceless memory cards in this brutal fashion, but we say it is a job
well done. ®</P>
<P> </P>
<P><A
href="http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/08/02/memory_breaking_project/">http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/08/02/memory_breaking_project/</A></P></DIV></FONT></DIV></BODY></HTML>