![]() Most cards now have their Video Speed Class rating included on the label. Video Speed Class: The V6, V10, V30, V60, and V90 ratings guarantee minimum levels of performance for recording video and indicate the write speeds, in MB/s, for video. ![]() Many SD cards come with a lifetime or 10-year warranty, and the SD Card Association says most SD cards have a lifespan of about 10 years with “normal usage.” Reliability: An SD card holds the only copy of a photo between the time you take it and when you copy it to a computer for editing, so it’s important to get a reliable card from a reputable manufacturer-such as SanDisk, Transcend, or Lexar-to minimize the chances of something going wrong.If not, stick with 32 GB to ensure that your card works with your device. Check your device to confirm it supports SDXC (extended capacity) cards (meaning cards 64 GB and higher) before buying one. If you need more room to store your media, many 128 GB SD cards cost about the same per gigabyte as their 64 GB counterparts. 64 GB capacity: A 64 GB SD card should be spacious enough for most uses, and such cards are less expensive per gigabyte than 32 GB cards.But you don’t get the full speed of UHS-II unless both camera and card support UHS-II, because it requires an additional row of physical pins to achieve its extra speed. The standard is backward-compatible, meaning you can use a faster UHS-II card with a UHS-I camera, or a UHS-I card with a UHS-II camera. ![]() All the point-and-shoot cameras we recommend support at least UHS-I bus cards.
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