Showing posts with label flash. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flash. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

The First Ever Flash Duplicator Built for Yield Analysis


Production line report is crucial to yield analysis; studied thoroughly, it very often offers potential to improve production efficiency. With U-Reach’s Intelligent 9 Flash Duplicator Gold Advanced Series, not only can you record and manage duplication jobs, you also gain meticulous details on all the tasks — formatting, testing, copying, and validating — performed during a mass production run.

The Intelligent 9 Flash Duplicator Gold Advanced Series, Log Report contains the following three major areas—


Log Report from Intelligent USB Duplicator
To prevent unauthorized access and accidental deletion, password protection 
can be enabled to safeguard the log. And if you don’t need the whole history logged, 
there is a filter to let you retrieve the report for—
  • Today
  • Most recent days
  • Specific period

After the report is downloaded to your flash memory card/USB flash drive to be 
accessed on your PC/notebook, it can be conveniently reviewed or printed.

Besides being instrumental in improved production efficiency for managers, the 

Log Report assists engineers and purchasers in gauging the quality of the flash 
media, and it also makes a perfect presentation for sales to deliver to their 
prospects or customers. Overall, Intelligent 9’s Log Report is essential to your 
success.


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Thursday, May 3, 2012

NAB Review


 Thank You for Stopping by Our Booth

 

Last month TeraMotions attended the NAB Trade Show in Las Vegas, NV April 14th -19th.    We enjoyed meeting everyone who stopped by our booth.  Reporter James E. O'Neal stopped by our booth to speak with TeraMotions and to snap a few pictures.  O'Neal even featured U-Reach, along with a picture of the U-Reach booth and U-Reach's representative, Faith Her, in his news article for the NAB Show Daily News.  Her is seen here holding U-Reach's copy-protected USBs and behind her are the Intelligent 9 Flash Duplicators that debuted in January of this year.  You can read O'Neal's full article here.
TeraMarketing 

 

Thursday, February 23, 2012

The First Generation of XQD Cards Have Hit the Market


There is a New Flash Card on the Market

Sony announced in January that it would be the sole supplier for the XQD memory card, which, according to the CompactFlash Association, is lined up to replace the established compact flash.  The XQD memory card is now available for purchase this February.

The new XQD memory card supports transfer rates up to 1Gbps/125Mbps read and write speed.  For now, the XQD will be used mostly by photographers, allowing them to shoot up to 100 frames of RAW format in continuous shooting mode.

  
Nikon 4D is the only camera on the market that supports the XQD card.  Currently the Nikon 4D retails for $6,000 while the 32GB XQD memory card retails for $229.99.  In addition, the card reader, which you will need in order to upload your photos to your PC, will set you back another $45.




TeraMarketing

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Are you sure it's my flash?

How to Find the Culprit of a Duplication Failure

If you frequently use flash duplicators to copy usb drives, it’s probably not unusual that you have experienced a duplication failure in the middle of the process.  Let us assume your duplicators are built with quality, so the culprit is really the USB drive, source or target (or both).For those who really want to know more about the causes, we take this opportunity to share our troubleshooting experiences. Before we dig in, bear in mind that a standard USB drive consists of two chips: controller and NAND flash.


And when we conclude a drive is responsible for failed duplication, it’s got to be some glitch over one or a combination of these three: 1) controller; 2) flash; 3) connection in between.To narrow down on the culprit, we advise you to conduct further read/write testing on a PC.  With help from flash testing tool such as H2testw, you can repeatedly write and read on your drive to the full capacity.  If there’s any bad sector on your drive (interpreted as NAND flash issue), you’ll hardly come through the test; if you experience unpredictable outcome, good runs mixed with failures, it is most likely the controller or its connection to NAND is flawed. Based on our years of experiences supporting customers, flash of inferior quality usually lead to duplication failures, which is why we suggest customers conduct pre-production testing of their flash on their duplicators, and adjust copy speed to accommodate quality discrepancies if necessary.  Bottomline, go with flash of known quality to save time and money for the long run!

TeraSupport


How to Duplicate Your USB







Wednesday, January 25, 2012

U-Reach Introduces its new Intelligent 9 Series



With its completely new ergonomic design and compact footprint, the Intelligent 9 Series flash duplicator provides not only efficient operation but also effortless maintenance. Available in CF, SD/microSD and USB duplicators of 8 to 120 ports, the new series offers three different editions: Silver, Gold and Red.

Silver edition gets the job done for most users; but if you run a factory with high volume duplication on a daily basis, Gold package offers you production log report and burn-in utility to stress-test your flash memory.  And for those who need more security guarding their intellectual property, Red Fox (codename) lets you build your own encryption mechanism during duplication.

Tera Marketing


To see more products like this you can visit our website at TeraMotions.com

For More Information on how to use and easily replace ports with Silver Fox, watch the video below.