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(Card) Reading is fundamental
For laptop users who are also photo enthusiasts, a way to get your digital camera’s photos onto your computer is a must. And a card reader has become the tool of choice: card readers are generally faster than the computer-to-camera USB cables that ship with most digital cameras, and a reader doesn’t suck your camera’s battery life like there’s no tomorrow.
The challenge is finding a card reader that doesn’t add even more bulk to your bag—the smaller the better, and the less cable the better. Back when I was using a 15-inch PowerBook G4, I had a handy reader that slid conveniently into the PC Card slot—and stayed there. It was almost like having a card reader built into my PowerBook. (I know, I know... many Windows-based laptops have just such a feature.) But when the PowerBook G4 was put to rest, so, apparently, were PC Card slots on the Mac. In their place, we now have ExpressCard slots.
I’ve been using a few newer memory-card readers for the space conscious, and thought I’d share my experiences. (Unfortunately for MacBook owners, three of the four products require an ExpressCard slot.)




These two card readers look nearly identical. The main difference is actually the depth of the card-reader slot—the slot on the Griffin model is approximately 3/4-inch deeper. This means that smaller cards, such as SD cards, sit flush against the end of the Griffin reader when inserted, whereas the same cards protrude a bit when inserted into the Belkin reader. Some people will prefer the Griffin approach, as it means that—if necessary—you can leave your memory card in the reader (in your laptop) in your bag. On the other hand, Belkin’s approach makes the card easier to remove from the reader when you’re finished with it.
Another advantage to these compact card readers—assuming you use memory cards that work with them—is that, because they sit nearly flush with the side of the MacBook Pro, you can actually keep them in your laptop on the go. (According to Griffin, the ExpressCard/34 Card Reader does not draw power when no memory card is in it. Belkin doesn’t go that far, noting that integrated circuits dissipate small amounts of current in standby mode, but also says this shouldn’t have a noticeable effect on battery life.)
How’s the performance on these products? Unfortunately, I no longer have the Delkin on hand, although, from memory, its download speed was as fast as any other card reader I’ve used. (And the truth is, a speed comparison between the Delkin and the other three products here wouldn’t have been meaningful, since I would have had to test the Delkin with a different type of memory card.) But I tested the other three by copying the contents of the SanDisk Ultra II SD Plus—which also has a standard SD connector—using the SanDisk’s USB connector, the Griffin ExpressCard reader, and the Belkin ExpressCard reader. Here’s how long it took to copy the same 166MB of photos and movies via the Finder (drag-and-drop), with time measured using the old “stopwatch while watching the Finder’s copy dialog” trick:
Finder (approximate) copy times
| SanDisk Ultra II SD Plus (USB connector) | 20.4 seconds |
| Griffin ExpressCard 34 | 19.8 seconds |
| Belkin Multimedia Reader & Writer ExpressCard | 19.0 seconds |
Time (in seconds) to transfer 166MB of data from memory card to Mac.
Since I don’t trust my reflexes as much as I did when I was a wee video-game-playing lad, I also repeated the test using Terminal and the
time cp -R
command, which tells you the exact amount of time, down to the thousandths of a second, your copy takes. As you can see in the table below, human error added a fraction of a second to each measurement, but I wasn’t that far off. (And the relative times were actually similar; maybe I’m not getting old as fast as I thought.)
Terminal (exact) copy times
| SanDisk Ultra II SD Plus (USB connector) | 19.922 seconds |
| Griffin ExpressCard 34 | 19.553 seconds |
| Belkin Multimedia Reader & Writer ExpressCard | 18.765 seconds |
Time (in seconds) to transfer 166MB of data from memory card to Mac.
What’s clear is that the data-transfer times are all in the same ballpark; you’re probably not going to choose one of these products over the others based on speed alone, unless saving a few seconds on every GB transferred is really that important to you. You can simply buy the solution that best fits your equipment. And between the very similar Belkin and Griffin products, the main differences are in compatibility with less-common card formats and how deeply cards slide into each.
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