expired SanDisk - 64GB Class10 SD Card ($44)and 64GB Flash Drive ($32) - $83.17 Delivered from Amazon
This was posted 9 months 2 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal
So these seemed like good deals seperately, but together makes it pretty sweet (The 2 individual prices added together and shipped together, that is, so saving ~$5 off the separate costs).
The seperate prices are:
SanDisk Cruzer 32 GB USB Flash Drive SDCZ36-032G-B35 - $16.29
SanDisk Cruzer 64 GB USB Flash Drive SDCZ36-064G-B35 - $31.99
SanDisk Ultra 32 GB SDHC Class 10 Flash Memory Card 30MB/s SDSDU-032G-AFFP - $19.99
SanDisk Ultra 64 GB SDXC Class 10 Flash Memory Card 30MB/s SDSDU-064G-AFFP - $44.99
Shipping is around $5-$6 and then about +$1 per item for things these small, just a rough estimate though, test it to get a final price.
If you like this deal, please feel free to use my affiliate link
Comments (Closed)


Thanks, just bought the 64GB SDXC class 10 card was $50.84 with shipping to 2150 in AUD so I swapped it to USD and with my bank conversion and charges it cost me $49.07 so a saving of $1.77. Cant blame Amazon making money on exchange rates same as paypal but often find better through my own bank. Would have preferred the micro but no delivery to OZ so happy with the SDXC
zigpy_siva on 22/08/2012 - 08:52 ¶when i do it, i get a separate charge for $1 or some amount saying as foreign currency transaction fee(or something like that) within few days of the transaction.
my account is in NAB…
greenie4242 on 21/08/2012 - 19:51 ¶Tried to buy a 32GB SDHC card - "We are not able to ship this item to your default shipping address."
+1 voteCompatibility with SDHC
SDXC host devices accept all previous families of SD memory cards.[26] Conversely, SDHC host devices will accept SDXC cards that follow Version 3.0, since the interface is identical,[3] but the following issues may affect usability:
SDXC cards are pre-formatted with Microsoft's proprietary and patented exFAT file system, which the host device might not support. Since Microsoft does not publish the specifications of exFAT and its use requires a non-free license, many alternative or older operating systems do not support exFAT for technical or legal reasons. The use of exFAT on some SDXC cards may render SDXC unsuitable as a universal exchange medium, as an SDXC card that uses exFAT would not be usable in all host devices. Since the FAT32 file system supports volumes up to the SDXC's maximum theoretical capacity of 2 TB as well, a user could reformat an SDXC card to use FAT32 for greater portability between computers (see below). FAT32-formatted SDXC cards can be used in a host device built for SDHC if the host device can handle 64 GB and larger volumes.
SDHC host devices will not test the new capability bits defined for SDXC 4.0 cards. It will therefore not be able to use the new features of SDXC, such as transfer speeds above UHS104 (104 MB/s).But for safety sake, I'm going to say no.

I am no expert but from what I have been told the SDXC is the, shall we say the next one in production after the SDHC and apparently capable of faster up and down speeds. ie one of my Samsung Cams will not work with a SDHC 4GB but will a SDXC 4GB…. but please anyone knows more please enlighten me

Would be handy for something like a portable OS installer, using http://www.pendrivelinux.com/yumi-multiboot-usb-creator/ as the write speed wouldn't matter once the OS's were copied over first time.
Or anything portable really, 30MB/s read is very fast for 2.0
donkeykong on 21/08/2012 - 23:16 ¶I will think twice when shopping overseas due to warranty issue that I have with my Beyerdynamic DT990 pro that I have bought from Amazon 6 months ago. I never thought it would failed on me as I have only spent a total of 2 hours with this headphone.


725
240GB SSD is tempting..