You've got a greater range than I've had to cope with. Most of my cameras take SD cards, but I have one needing memory stickPro, and had a fairly early one needing CF.
My very first digital cameras didn't have removable memory at all, just 1kb or so of flash memory internally.
I do still have a PCMCIA card here at work, used for storing methods on an instrument. When we got the instrument the manufacturer offered us a 8kb card for something over £200. A quick check online found a sandisk 32mb one for £40 - tracking down one as small as offered was difficult but it's quite capable of using the larger card, so their mark up seemed rather excessive to me.
There’s nothing more satisfying in tech terms than thinking back to what memory used to cost…
I can remember my first digital camera, a Canon IXUS V in 2002, came with an 8mb CF card in the box, which was considered stingy even then. I saved and bought a comparatively massive 64mb card to replace it, which was more than enough for a day’s snapping back on that 2.1mp camera (especially as the battery never lasted long). These days, a bog standard iphone comes with around 2,000 times that storage..
Just to add context, here’s a picture I took at the computing museum at Bletchley Park (UK) a couple of years ago.
The disk on the left is from 1965 and stored a whopping 8mb - although it had to record on both sides to manage that. It’s every bit as big as it looks (the machines it leant against were roughly the size of washing machines).
I dread to think what any of this stuff cost at the time…
Thanks for sharing, it really was a different time 👍🏻
I have here a photograph of myself in 1979, it does not make me any younger!
Changing discs for my first animated film made at the NFB (NATIONAL FILM BOARD OF CANADA)
PDP-11/34 with 124,000 words of memory
And The disk unit of a DEC RK611 model with a single drive for a removable cartridge with a capacity of 7 million words.
Wow, amazing pics - were you really creating/storing animations on computer, at that time?
I forgot to mention, that 1965 disk in my picture wouldn’t actually have been big enough to store the picture I took of it! And that’s talking jpeg, let alone RAW, which my XP2 also saved for me at the time…
Wow, awesome post! Who could tell those days that future cameras with less than 24mp would be considered kind of “low resolution” and cards with 32GB not enough storage space 😂
And we are lucky having a glimpse of how scientific and technological advances will shape our future. Think of how far AF has progressed for example. And optic correction for lenses.
Kodak DCS 100 (1991), the very first DSLR! 1.3MP (1280x1024)
Price between: $20,000 and $30,000 USD (with a multiplication factor of 1.8)
Kodak marketed the Kodak DCS system in 1991
The system consists of a Nikon F3 HP with a digital back.
Captured photos are stored in a storage unit (DSU)
A total of 987 units divided into six models were sold between 1991 and 1994
Interestingly, at the very beginning when the first memory cards arrived.
The designers of the first Fujix DS / Nikon E cameras simply created a hinged back similar to film cameras.