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PPC > Reviews>
Storage
Jessops USB SmartMedia Reader
The Jessops USB SmartMedia adaptor gives you
fast access to your digital photos. How well does it work?
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Product |
SmartMedia Card
Reader |
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From |
Jessops |
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Web |
www.jessops.co.uk |
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Price |
£29.95 |
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PPC Rating |
8/10 |
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Revolutionises your
digital photography work and a good price too |
One of the bugbears of digital photography is
having to wait ages for the pictures to slowly transfer down a
serial lead from your camera to the PC. With cards as large as 128Mb
now available, this can take an hour or more. You can drastically
cut this time down though by using a SmartMedia adapter which
connects directly to the PC, bypassing the camera and serial lead to
allow high speed downloading of the images to your hard drive.
Jessops are well known in the UK High street as
purveyors of all things photographic. As well as selling a vast
range of products from different manufacturers, they also have their
own branded products. The SmartMedia Reader is one such device. It
is actually a reader and writer and comes in a blister pack
containing the device itself plus an installation CD and a USB
extension cable.
In Use
Setting it up is straightforward. Simply load the
drivers from the CD and you’re done, no reboot required, which
makes a nice change. If your USB ports are at the back of the PC,
you can use the extension cable to make it easier plugging and
unplugging the device. Once connected it appears as a new drive in
Windows Explorer. You can then insert and remove SmartMedia cards as
required. Each time you insert a new card, you need to press F5 to
refresh the drive contents to see what is on the new card.
My cards were created using an Olympus 2000Z. The
images appeared in a subdirectory and could then be copied wherever
I wanted. Equally, images from the hard drive could be copied to the
SmartMedia card.
Speed
wise it was impressive and copied pictures pretty much at the
maximum speed for a USB device. A 16Mb card which normally took
around twenty minutes or more to copy using a serial lead copied in
about thirty seconds via the adapter.
One slight niggle was that when you have finished
with the adapter, you do need to manually ‘stop’ the device
using a small applet before removing it. Just pulling it out could
result in the machine crashing. This is more of a Windows limitation
than anything lacking in the design of the unit though.
Drivers are provided for Windows 98/Me/2000 as well
Apple Mac OS 8.5 or higher and the unit can cope with SmartMedia
cards up to 128Mb in size.
The CD also included a copy of Piccolo 2.0 which is
an image manipulation program that costs around £25 on its own.
Piccolo is designed to tidy up and tweak digital photos. Finally,
you can make use of Jessop’s Internet printing facility should you
want to go for high quality prints from your SmartMedia cards.
Conclusion
If you’re still struggling with a serial lead
between your digital camera and PC, you could do far worse than
consider the Jessops SmartMedia reader both for its convenience and
speed. At just £29.95 it’s excellent value for money too.
Iain Laskey
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