ONE (1) Pre-Owned Olympus or Fujifilm 128MB xD Picture Card Memory Card for Olympus or Fujifilm Digital Cameras Guaranteed

·          This is a Pre-Owned Olympus or Fujifilm 128MB xD Picture Card Memory Card that Includes a SELLER GUARANTEE, 30-day returns with the SELLER paying the return shipping

·          Manufactured in JAPAN by TOSHIBA

·          Technical Designation: MXD128P3 or DCP-128

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From Wikipedia

Notes on the the xD-Picture Card 

The xD-Picture Card is an obsolete form of flash memory card, used in digital cameras made by Olympus, Fujifilm, and Kodak during the 2000s. The xD in the xD-Picture Card stands for eXtreme Digital.

xD cards were manufactured with capacities of 16 MB[a] up to 2 GB.[b][1] The standard was phased out in the late 2000s in favour of the SD card, which had been its primary competitor.[2]

History

The cards were developed by Olympus and Fujifilm, and introduced into the market in July 2002. Toshiba Corporation and Samsung Electronics manufactured the cards for Olympus and Fujifilm. xD cards were sold under other brands, including Kodak, SanDisk, PNY, and Lexar, but were not branded with the respective companies' logos, except for Kodak. Previously, xD competed primarily with Secure Digital (SD) cards, CompactFlash (CF), and Sony's Memory Stick. Because of its higher cost and limited usage in products other than digital cameras, xD lost ground to SD, which is broadly used by cellular phones, personal computers, digital audio players and many other digital cameras.

Olympus began to move away from the xD format with the mid-2009[3] announcement of the E-P1 camera, which supported only Secure Digital memory cards.[4] As of Spring 2010, all new Olympus cameras announced at the 2010 Consumer Electronics Show and Photo Marketing Association International Trade Show can use SD cards.[5][6][7][8][9][10] This changeover to the SD card format has never been officially announced by Olympus Corporation. The higher-end DSLR cameras such as the E-3 and E-5 among others continue to use CompactFlash cards as well. Certain final Olympus cameras using xD cards are also supporting microSD cards with a special, included adapter.

Fuji released its last digital camera accepting that card, namely Fujifilm FinePix F200EXR (a variant of 2008 FinePix F100fd), being released back in Q2 2009, as being moving away from xD format since Q4 2008.

Type M/M+ and Type H cards

xD-Picture Card, 1000 MB, type MxD-Picture Card, 512 MB, type HA size comparison of an xD-Picture card with a MicroSD Card

The original xD cards (Type S) were available in 16 MB to 512 MB capacities. The Type M card, released in February 2005,[13] uses multi-level cell (MLC) architecture to achieve a theoretical storage capacity of up to 8 GB. As of June 2010, Type M cards are available in sizes from 256 MB to 2 GB. However, the Type M suffers from slower read/write speeds than the original cards.

The Type H card, first released in November 2005,[14] offers higher data rates than Type M cards (theoretically as much as 3 times faster). As of 2008, Type H cards were only available in 256 MB, 512 MB, 1000 MB, and 2000 MB capacities. Both Fuji and Olympus discontinued the production of Type H cards in 2008, citing high production costs.[15]

The Type M+ card, first released in April 2008,[16] offers data rates 1.5 times that of Type M cards. As of 2008, cards are available only in 1 and 2 GB capacities.

Olympus says that its xD cards support special "picture effects" when used in some Olympus cameras, though these software features are not intrinsically hardware-dependent. Type H and M+ cards however, are required in newer models to capture video at high rate (640×480 @ 30fps). Due to changes in the cards' storage architecture, newer Type M and H cards may have compatibility issues with some older cameras (especially video recording). Compatibility lists are available for Olympus: Olympus America's[17] and Fujifilm's.[18] Newer cards are incompatible with some card readers.