Posted 4/7/2005 12:25 PM | | | | i was thinking of buying the 1GB memory card but i was not sure if it would work on the Nokia 7610 and if its any good does anyone no if its good |
| Posted 4/7/2005 3:17 PM | | | It certainly works well with the Nokia 7610, as this phone is by far our biggest target market for the 1GB RS-MMC card. We have some screenshots somewhere of the phone in action with the 1GB RS-MMC. We will dig them out and post up at some point, the compatibility post needs updating i guess anyway as it only covers 128Mb and 256MB for the Nokia 7610. Either way, we certify and provide you with a guarantee that it works with your phone, or your money back (for 14-day period ). And after that, usual 5yr manufacturer's warranty. Cheers
 Webmaster www.MobyMemory.com London, UK |
| Posted 4/9/2005 12:37 PM | | | | ok cheers iam gonna buy the 1GB memory card will it slow down ur phone if u have to much on it |
| Posted 4/11/2005 10:15 AM | | | no it doesnt work that way. it is more related to particular (symbian) applications and how they are programmed to interact with a memory card. a good example was the original n-gage and its music player, which scans a big memory card at a very slow pace (and has a max no of tracks it can hold in its playlist). the answer to this issue with symbian mobiles, is to find a different music player that scans bigger cards more efficiently. you should not have a problem, but if you do, can i suggest keeping most content in sub-folders on your memory card, as most applications will not default to scanning all sub-folders. cheers
 Webmaster www.MobyMemory.com London, UK |
| Posted 4/11/2005 7:11 PM | | | | do i recon i shud buy the USB2.0 thingy which will make tranfer quicker is there any point of gettin it coz it will cost 111 pounds wit the 1GB memory card |
| Posted 4/11/2005 7:38 PM | | | A USB2 card reader is a must-have purchase with big memory cards, mainly because the difference in transfer speed is dramatic, and your loading time (to fill a whole card) will go from a matter of hours, down to minutes. (as long as you have a PC with USB2 ports - like most modern pcs) as well, otherwise the saving in time is less dramatic. Also, for general maintenance of the memory card (eg. if it ever needs to be re-formatted) this is where a memory card reader is needed to re-format in a more controlled and reliable way. hope that helps.
 Webmaster www.MobyMemory.com London, UK |
| Posted 4/11/2005 8:45 PM | | | | um wat is the USB2 does it go in your phone like the memory card or is it a cable so when ur tranfer say MP3 onto ur phone it does it faster throu the usb cable |
| Posted 4/12/2005 11:09 AM | | | A USB2 card reader (like this one) is a device that allows you to connect your memory card directly to a PC (or MAC). When connected up, you can copy and paste any digital file you wish from within Windows Explorer, whether it be your MP3 music collection, or some videos, or games or applications. The speed of transfer with a card reader is far quicker than other means of transfer. Also, if you ever need to re-format a memory card, then a modern USB2 card reader is the most reliable way to format a corrupted memory card. for bigger memory cards, they are an essential purchase. to explain, via bluetooth it would take days, literally, to fill a 2GB memory card. Whereas with a fast USB2 card reader, this is cut down to ~20 minutes to fill the whole memory card. (although filling the whole card in one go is not typical usage ) Hope this makes clear why we recommend reader with big memory cards. cheers
 Webmaster www.MobyMemory.com London, UK |
| Posted 4/15/2005 1:32 PM | | | | oh so u put your memory card in that usb2 thing which is connected to you pc then u can tranfer any file u want such as mp3 |
| Posted 4/15/2005 2:03 PM | | | Yes, transfer of files dfirectly from your PC to the memory card via a compatible USB2 card reader is the fastest way to load content onto your memory card, as the reader will make the card accessible as another drive on your PC. This means when you open Windows Explorer, the memory card is seen as a new [Removable Drive] (e.g It is the J: Drive on my PC, but this may differ on your PC of course). So i can copy and paste .AAC music tracks ripped from my CD with Nokia Audio Manager straight into sub-folders i have created on my memory card. Check out our HOWTO guides if you need any more help. p.s if you don;t need MP3 for cross-device compatibility, then my recommendation would be to rip to .AAC 64kbps format (which is the default encoding setup on Nokia Audio Manager). This gives excellent playback results, and very small file sizes, so there is room for a bigger music catalogue. Good luck 
 Webmaster www.MobyMemory.com London, UK |
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