logo
SD Memory Cards Celebrates 25 Years as the World's Favorite Memory Card

SD Memory Cards Celebrates 25 Years as the World's Favorite Memory Card

Business Upturn20-05-2025

San Ramon, Calif., United States:
SDA celebrates 20th Anniversary of microSD, donates to plant trees, empower women, remains dedicated to its legacy of innovation contributing to the advancement of technology for the convenience, enjoyment, and well-being of consumers
SD Association (SDA) is celebrating the 25th anniversary of the venerable SD memory card launched in 2000 and its long history of improving the lives of billions of people globally in numerous ways. Throughout the last 25 years , SD and microSD memory cards have sold more than 12 billion cards and evolved by offering massive storage capacities and lightning fast speeds, meeting industry needs. SD memory cards remain the most used removable storage card for consumer electronic devices.
This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250520985230/en/
This year, the SDA is celebrating another significant milestone, the 20th anniversary of the ground-breaking microSD. microSD memory cards remain a powerful and popular storage choice and played a pivotal role in transforming the mobile industry as the first storage expansion option for billions of mobile phones. Selfies, mobile phone photography, enjoying music and videos on a mobile phone all became possible because of innovation driven by the SDA. Today, SD memory cards remain a valued part of the consumer and industrial products, allowing people to download and enjoy content from the world's most popular video streaming services, store games and run apps directly from a card, and use those cards as an efficient memory expansion of their products.
To honor the support SD technology customers worldwide overwhelmingly provided SD during the past 25 years, the SDA contributed to OneTreePlanted and the Morino Project , expediting the planting of 25,000 trees around the world to help fight climate change and benefit the planet. It also contributed $25,000 to the Audiopedia Foundation to support its efforts to empower African women through preloading audio content onto microSD memory cards allowing the most basic mobile phones to become portals of empowerment, turning isolated communities into connected hubs of health, financial, and educational information.
Some of the most advanced gaming consoles and handheld gaming devices rely on SD memory cards for storage expansion. This storage feature allows players to easily upgrade their devices and maintain a broad portfolio of their favorite digital games while optimizing their user experience.
'SD memory cards continue delivering portability and convenience, letting people upgrade the storage in their devices at any time thanks to the dedication and vision of our nearly 800 SDA members,' said Yosi Pinto, Chairman of the SDA. 'The cards continue to help product manufacturers innovate and provide better user experience because SD is a proven storage solution that continuously evolves with technology evolutions and market needs requiring higher speed data access and larger capacities.'
Progress & Innovation: SD Memory Card Statistics The first SD card sold in 2000 provided just 8 megabytes of storage capacity, whereas today's SDUC or microSDUC cards offer 4 terabytes of capacity, a 500,000 percent capacity increase
Boosted card speeds specifications from 12.5 MB/sec to ~4GB/sec with the latest SD Express specification, more than x300 speed increase
Maintained backward compatibility support with plug-and-play convenience
'The SDA is laser-focused on ensuring its standards remain a compelling storage choice across an extensive variety of products and uses for both consumers and businesses,' said Hiroyuki Sakamoto, President of the SDA. 'We expect SD memory cards to remain a critical, cost-effective storage option across a variety of applications and devices in the future since 394 zettabytes of data is expected to be created by 2028.'
SD enables new applications with unique storage requirements not imagined 25 years ago. VR/AR, drones, gaming consoles, medical devices, 360-degree cameras, nature monitoring, IoT, Edge computing and space exploration increasingly rely on SD. With the growth of AI, storage needs are expected to increase on devices and will require SD Express memory cards and their SSD-level performance and features.
SD Association
The SDA is a global ecosystem of nearly 800 technology companies charged with setting interoperable SD standards. The SDA encourages the development of consumer electronics, wireless communication, digital imaging, industrial and networking products utilizing market-leading SD technology. The SD standard is the number one choice for consumers and businesses, having earned more than 80 percent of the memory card market with its reliable interoperability and easy-to-use format. Today, smartphones, tablets, drones, IoT devices, HDTVs, audio players, automotive systems, computers, digital cameras, and a variety of industrial uses feature SD interoperability. For more information about SDA or to join, please visit the Association's website, https://www.sdcard.org .
SD logos are trademarks licensed by SD-3C LLC.
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250520985230/en/
Disclaimer: The above press release comes to you under an arrangement with Business Wire. Business Upturn takes no editorial responsibility for the same.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Top 8 African countries with the least affordable housing in 2025
Top 8 African countries with the least affordable housing in 2025

Business Insider

time15 hours ago

  • Business Insider

Top 8 African countries with the least affordable housing in 2025

The 2025 Global Housing Affordability Index from Numbeo has revealed a concerning trend across African countries: a wide gap between property prices and average household incomes. Business Insider Africa presents the African countries with the least affordable housing in 2025 The ranking is courtesy of Numbeo Ethiopia and Cameroon rank among the least affordable housing markets globally, with ratios indicating nearly five decades of income required to afford housing. The new ranking places Ethiopia and Cameroon among the three least affordable housing markets in the world, trailing only behind Syria and Cuba. The Price-to-Income Ratio (PIR) is the key metric used in this index. It compares the cost of a home to the median annual household income in a country. The higher the ratio, the more years of income it would take for a typical citizen to afford a house signaling poor affordability. Numbeo, the world's largest database of user-contributed housing data, released the 2025 figures based on crowd-sourced entries across global cities and countries. The data paints a stark picture for countries like Ethiopia and Cameroon, where citizens face almost five decades of income sacrifice just to own a modest home. In contrast, some African nations, like South Africa, have some of the most affordable housing ratios on the continent. Top 8 African countries with the highest price-to-income ratios in 2025 Rank Country Price-to-Income Ratio (PIR) 1 Ethiopia 47.1 2 Cameroon 46.6 3 Mauritius 18.5 4 Egypt 18.2 5 Algeria 16.7 6 Morocco 13.4 7 Tunisia 12.2 8 South Africa 3.2 Investor interest drops as luxury units outpace demand Real estate pioneer Ermias Amelga describes the Ethiopian market as oversupplied with expensive apartments and villas. He said: ' Speculative investors are offloading properties at discounted rates,' noting that demand has slowed and confidence has dropped. In Addis Ababa, the situation is especially severe. Despite hosting institutions like the African Union and the UN Economic Commission for Africa, the City Administration has repaid just 1.9% of its 25.85 billion birr bond to the Commercial Bank of Ethiopia over the first three quarters of the fiscal year. Experts blame the lack of mortgage banking, luxury-focused development, and the widening gap between housing demand and availability. The crisis is also tied to a wider slowdown in Ethiopia's real estate sector. Developers face longer sales cycles, while government efforts to regulate the industry and close the supply gap have struggled to gain traction.

China breaks into Malawi's mining sector with $7 billion investment package
China breaks into Malawi's mining sector with $7 billion investment package

Business Insider

time17 hours ago

  • Business Insider

China breaks into Malawi's mining sector with $7 billion investment package

The government of Malawi has signed a landmark $7 billion agreement with Chinese conglomerate, Hunan Sunwalk Technology Group, marking the largest foreign investment in the nation's mining sector. Malawi signed a $7 billion deal with Hunan Sunwalk Technology Group for a titanium extraction project and mineral processing facility. This agreement reflects Malawi's strategic shift towards international partnerships for its natural resource sector. Malawi's government sees the deal as a pivotal step towards transforming mining into an economic growth driver. The deal, signed on June 16, 2025, during the China-Africa Economic and Trade Expo (CAETE) in Changsha, China, includes a large-scale t itanium extraction project in Salima and the creation of a state-of-the-art mineral processing facility in the country. Following the signing, the country's Minister of Mining, Dr. Ken Zikhale Ng'oma, hailed the deal as a strategic breakthrough, emphasizing its alignment with President Dr. Lazarus McCarthy Chakwera's long-term vision of transforming mining into a key driver of the national economy. ' This MoU signals a new era; anchored on sustainability, innovation, and inclusive growth. It aligns squarely with President Chakwera's agenda to turn mining into a driver of national development,' Ng'oma said. China deepens relations in Malawi's mining sector Notably, Hunan Sunwalk CEO and Founder Hou Xingwang described the agreement as a strategic milestone for both nations, stating that it will, ' facilitate the flow of capital, technology, and skilled human resources between China and Malawi ' He also expressed interest in exploring investments in agriculture and other sectors to contribute to Malawi's broader economic development. Ng'oma emphasized that the partnership goes beyond raw material extraction, delivering technological transfer, strict environmental compliance, and human resource development. He highlighted Hunan Sunwalk's successful performance in Zimbabwe as a testament to the company's capabilities. Reassuring the public, the Minister said, " This is the first time Malawi has entered into such a comprehensive MoU with a multinational mining corporation. ' ' We ensured that due diligence was conducted thoroughly, and we are confident that the interests of Malawians are well protected." He added. Officials from both parties described the agreement as a "win-win" venture, with potential to create thousands of new jobs, infrastructure development, and enhance economic growth. The Chinese company has reportedly commenced exploration and feasibility studies in the Salima District. As more African countries move away from traditional EU and US aid models, which often come with allegiance requirements, Malawi is among those eagerly anticipating the transformation of its natural resource sector through partnership with China.

Top 10 African countries with the strongest energy regulation frameworks
Top 10 African countries with the strongest energy regulation frameworks

Business Insider

time18 hours ago

  • Business Insider

Top 10 African countries with the strongest energy regulation frameworks

The African Development Bank has released the 2024 edition of its Electricity Regulatory Index (ERI), confirming significant progress among African countries in strengthening the regulatory frameworks governing their electricity sectors. Business Insider Africa presents the African countries with the strongest energy regulation frameworks in 2024 The ranking is courtesy the AfDB's 2024 Electricity Regulatory Index (ERI), Senegal ranks highest in the 2024 index due to successful reforms and enhanced transparency, followed by Kenya and Uganda. This year's ERI results reflect not just the adoption of laws and policies, but the tangible implementation of reforms by various African countries, leading to stronger and more autonomous regulatory institutions. Since its launch in 2018, the ERI has served as a diagnostic and policy support tool designed to help governments, regulators, and development partners identify regulatory gaps, monitor progress, and prioritize reform efforts. The 2024 edition draws on extensive feedback from national utilities, energy regulators, and regional electricity bodies. It evaluates countries across three core pillars: Regulatory Governance, Regulatory Substance, and Regulatory Outcomes, each measuring a specific dimension of how well a country's regulatory framework supports transparency, efficiency, accountability, and long-term investment. According to the Bank, the latest results confirm that African electricity regulators are evolving. Once seen primarily as administrative arms of government, many have grown into strategic institutions with measurable influence on energy policy and market performance. Countries are beginning to move from commitment to delivery. Wale Shonibare, Director for Energy Financial Solutions, Policy and Regulation at the Bank Group, described the 2024 index as telling a 'hopeful story,' adding that regulators across the continent are beginning to show results. ' African countries are not just passing laws, they are implementing them. Regulators are transforming from administrative bodies into strategic institutions with measurable influence, ' he said. Top 10 Countries in the 2024 ERI The full list of the top ten performers based on their ERI scores is presented below: Rank Country ERI Score Governance (RGI) Substance (RSI) Outcomes (ROI) 1 Senegal 0.892 0.927 0.949 0.848 2 Kenya 0.889 0.926 0.941 0.837 3 Uganda 0.885 0.963 0.988 0.745 4 Namibia 0.875 0.871 0.883 0.870 5 Tanzania 0.858 0.899 0.888 0.786 6 Zimbabwe 0.848 0.869 0.946 0.730 7 Rwanda 0.826 0.916 0.952 0.610 8 Benin 0.807 0.887 0.849 0.687 9 Liberia 0.803 0.849 0.866 0.694 10 Niger 0.799 0.881 0.746 0.770 Senegal tops the 2024 Electricity Regulatory Index for the first time with a score of 0.892, driven by recent reforms and the 2021 creation of the CRSE, which boosted regulatory independence and transparency. Kenya ranks second at 0.889, thanks to EPRA's efforts in tariff reform and investor confidence. Uganda, the long-time leader, drops to third with 0.885, still leading in governance and substance, but affected by a decline in outcomes due to stalled power agreements expected to resume in 2025.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store