Product Description Dazzle digital media products are designed and built to be easy to use and help both amateur and professional users capture, edit and share digital video and photos with high-quality results.Dazzle PC card adapter line of products is portable and convenient, providing exceptional performance, and high-speed data transfer anywhere. This adapter comes with a Dazzle's OnDVD software package for easy creation of photo slideshow.
Instant card reader!October 9, 2007 Bought this for my SD card, in my laptop. The product was instantly recognized by XP, reads several card types, and has no issues. Very simple, effective card reader without using up my USB ports! Highly recommend to others for quick read of cards.
Great solution!September 1, 2007 I bought this to replace an external USB multi card reader. It's a great alternative and seems to be working well so far (I've only used it a few times). It fits flush with the side of the laptop (even when there is an SD card inside). The only drawback is the whole adapter has to be removed to remove the memory card, and it doesn't read all memory cards.
Great item perfect solutionJune 13, 2005 I bought the Sony Vaio laptop but didn't like that it only had a built in reader for their memory sticks only. The Dazzle was the perfect solution to read my SD cards. It's just slides right in the PCMCIA and I am able to use if to read my SD cards. I leave it in the slot so it's the next best thing to a built in SD media reader.
Abysmal performanceMarch 4, 2005 3 out of 6 found this review helpful
Will list all the files on the inserted media but for most files when I click on them to open or copy, it then says it can't find the file. Happens most with larger files (3 MB or so) but also sometimes with small files. Adapter is completely useless, I can't depend on it working.
Worked out of the box with Red Hat Linux 8.0January 14, 2003 4 out of 7 found this review helpful
It's always a treat to find a device that works out of the box on my Linux laptop. I plugged in the card, did 'mount -t msdos /dev/hdc1 /mnt/flash' and was in business. This was using Red Hat 8.0.