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Forget 1TB microSD cards, the next-gen products will be faster than the drive in your laptop

Published Feb 26th, 2019 7:31AM EST
microSD Express Standard
Image: Zach Epstein, BGR

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Image source: SD Association

Just as expected, storage solution vendors came out with new memory products at MWC 2019. But I can’t say I anticipated the 1TB microSD cards that were announced yesterday. However, before you get too excited about the amount of expandable storage you’ll be able to add to your Android smartphone, you should know that there’s already something better than a 1TB microSD card: the promise that the next-gen models will be incredibly fast.

The SD Association announced at the Mobile World Congress the new microSD Express standard that will leverage PCIe, NVMe, and microSD technologies to increase transfer speeds dramatically. If Western Digital’s 1TB SanDisk Extreme card can deliver read speeds of up to 160MB/s, the new microSD Express cards will reach speeds of 985MB/s:

microSD Express delivers speeds necessary to transfer large amounts of information generated by data-intense wireless communication, speed-hungry applications running on cards and mobile computing devices, ever-evolving gaming systems, multi-channel IoT devices, numerous automotive uses, higher resolution mobile videos, action cameras, 360o videos, VR and more.

At those speeds, microSD cards will be even faster than all HDDs in older computers, as well as some of the consumer SSDs that ship with some of the newer models. 
On top of that, the new cards will consume less energy than traditional microSD memory cards and will not exceed the maximum consumed power.

 

SDA explained that microSD Express cards defined in the new SD 7.1 specification will be offered in various capacities, including microSDHC Express, microSDXC Express, and microSDUC Express.

What the Association didn’t mention are actual products built on the new standard, and we had no announcement from storage device makers. So if you need 1TB of extra storage on your phone right now, you’d be better going for one of the two new cards than waiting for microSD Express products to launch.

Chris Smith Senior Writer

Chris Smith has been covering consumer electronics ever since the iPhone revolutionized the industry in 2008. When he’s not writing about the most recent tech news for BGR, he brings his entertainment expertise to Marvel’s Cinematic Universe and other blockbuster franchises.

Outside of work, you’ll catch him streaming almost every new movie and TV show release as soon as it's available.