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For Toshiba EXCERIA M302, 1781 customer reviews collected from 2 e-commerce sites, and the average score is 4.4.

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26.10.2017

This Micro SD Cards functioned perfectly without any problems and completed moving of files and images from the SD card to the computer device at ease. This powerful SD card supports 4K/Full HD recording that is taken and captured from mobile phones and can store a large amount of files in them and provides people with fast capturing of images and videos. This specific SD Card provides a transfer speed of overall amount of 90 MB/S and it also supports USB 3.0 speeds and this means pictures are sent extremely quickly.The build of the SD card itself is extremely sturdy and rigid meaning it can handle hot and tough conditions and it is well designed for photography purposes outside and they canoperate through any scenarios without any hassle and as a bonus they offer shockproof and waterproof resistances, which is absolutely amazing.The SD Card itself comes safety packaged in a cardboard box which is brilliant, however breaking apart the cardboard is very difficult. The SD card itself also offered X Ray proofs to help individuals save and shield their images stored in the SD card itself.Additionally, the Memory Card allows the transferring of files, images and videos to occur extremely quickly which some SD cards cannot do.Overall, I would recommend this Memory card to anyone with a key passion in taking photos and videos, or know that they are going to store a large amount of memories, and this is a must buy product since it is extremely reliable and won't break apart as easily as others SD cards.
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29.7.2016

I ordered this about four months ago to use in my action camera, I am pleased to say that it is still working well without any problems at all.This is a relatively inexpensive class 10 microSD card, in laymen's terms this essentially means that this card is perfect for capturing high definition video and handle burst shooting with a camera. Anything lower than a class 10 and it may not be able to cope with the stream of data that your device is trying to write to it.To help you understand what class 10 actually means; imagine that you have a bucket full of water and a funnel that you want to pour it through. The first funnel is a class 2 funnel and is very narrow, so much so that every time you begin to pour water (data)into it, you have to stop and wait for it to flow through before you can send more or else it will overflow. This is essentially what happens with SD card lower than a class 10 when you try to write large amounts of HD data to it. You then go out and buy yourself a class 10 funnel that is much wider. This funnel you can pour water through without stopping as it can cope much better without overflowing since water is able to flow through in a much larger volume. This is much the same as a class 10 SD card when it comes to processing large amounts of continuous data.Hopefully this will help you understand why you need a class 10 SD card as opposed to the much cheaper lower class ones when you are using it in a device such as a camera / phone / tablet.
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16.6.2016

Toshiba Exceria M302 128gb Class 19 U3When I first tested this card in my phone the speeds were only a little above the 128gb Samsung evo+ that it's replacing. The Samsung achieved a write of 16mb/s and read of 34mb/s whilst the Toshiba was write 24mb/s and read 26mb/s. Being a u3 card the Toshiba has to perform at a minimum of 30mb/s write speed. Therefore I made the assumption my phone must be the limiting factor. Once I popped into my pc via a usb 3 card reader I sent a lot of video files over to it and it maintained a speed of 30 - 31.5mb/s so it's definitely up to it's specifications. I also tested the read speed transferring video files back to the pc and achieved a nice stable 90mb/swhich I was very pleased with.Unlike my other 128gb cards and flash drives for some reason this displays as 115gb usable space (normally a 128gb will have 119gb usable space). I'm not too sure where the other 4gb has gone!On another positive note, I had no issue writing to the Toshiba card via my PC whereas although my Samsung card performs flawlessly in my phone I could never get it to write via the PC (unless I dropped small files one at a time). I have no idea why this is but it means the Toshiba card has better compatibility than the Samsung Evo+The card is up to it's speed standards and as such will perform it's part for 4k and high frame rate video recording.
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1.8.2017

I've originally bought this for my Motorola Moto G5 phone. But it did not work properly there. It reported an error when trying to format it as internal memory. And when using as removable memory, the phone constantly thought that the card is corrupted, although when checked on Windows, the card was not corrupted at all and the movies (which the phone refused to play (MX Player showed only black reviewes and crashed when trying to play)) have been binary identical to the originals on my hard drive.I've also checked the card to make sure that it is not a fake and it isn't. It achieves 73.9 MByte/s read speed in a USB3 card reader and all 32GB are working fine without any error; when fillingthem with Pseudo-random data and reading it back.So the card works absolutely fine on a Windows 10 laptop.In the Lenovo Community, I've then found a report where someone had exactly the same Toshiba card and exactly the same phone (also UK model) and exactly the same problem. In his case and in my case, switching to a different brand of SD card solved the problem.I'm not sure if we can blame Toshiba, because the card works fine under Windows 10 and also in an Raspberry Pi2 (even with SD card overclocked from 50 to 72).It might be a problem in the firmware of the Motorola phone which Motorola and/or Lenovo should fix.
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8.1.2019

I read here some people are having problems with their card seeming smaller than it should be, so I want to confirm this is a genuine 32gb micro flash card and has been tested using H2testw which is tried and trusted freeware I have used for many years. The read write speed is a little slower than expected but the card works ok in my Nikon camera.For anyone interested the sdcard.org is an association founded by Panasonic, SanDisk and Toshiba, there is a mountain of useful info to help you choose which card is best for you.If your card is saying only 16gb or 32gb when you know it’s bigger chances are you have not formatted it correctly.In Windows if formatting as FAT16 your card/drive will only be able to format up to 16gb or if formatting as Fat32 will only format up to 32gb drive. If you use Windows and your drive is bigger than 32gb you will need to Format using NTFS. Linux and some Android OS can format a larger FAT32 capacity than Windows.If you have any doubts about the capacity of your flash card/ usb stick test the flash with H2testw before you use the card as the read/write tests are destructive. Highly recommend testing your drive having been the victim years ago of a dud USB flash that caused me to lose data I always use H2testw before I use new flash drives now.
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16.6.2018

I bought this simply because it was the cheapest 32GB card I could find from one of the "big four" makers.I note that there has been been some concern expressed by other reviewers about "fake" products, and so out of curiosity used one of the standard test programs to see how this one fared, especially in view of the low price. Sure enough, it didn't reach the makers' specified max speeds for read or write operations. But these assume "perfect" (ie lossless) transfers within the equipment to which the card is attached. The typical home computer is far from perfect, and so I assume are typical cameras (I have no experience of video). Retesting in a second and third PC produced distinctly different results,and so I have to conclude that the kit using the card is as significant a factor as the inherent speed of the card itself. As it is, it comfortably outperformed the fastest card I already own, so I have no cause for dissatisfaction.But anyone finding a card which is either below the specified storage capacity or very slow to read or write compared with other similar cards (or both) should suspect a possibly sub-standard (fake) card. Slow speed alone might well be the fault not of the SD card but of their equipment.
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29.7.2017

My second card like this from this firm.The Toshiba Exceria M302 64GB Micro SD Memory Card 90 MB/s which is excellent for capturing 4K videos and action shots in 4k.Class 10 and rated at U3 (U3 menas the BUS speed).Both my "Sports" cameras use these Micro cards and they are very good.Also 64Gb gives me a huge amount of space to store what I am shooting.Not as much as 128Gb in my larger cameras and camcorders but 64Gb is as large as these 2 cameras use for now.Boasting an impressive 95Mb/s read, 60Mb/s write speed it never lets me down.This is still blisteringly fast, in general, and leaves even some of those cards who claim speeds of 45Mb/s in the dust.That being said,it doesn’t mean that other cards on the market which are only UHS Speed Class 1 are slower.They may not have been qualified for speed class 3, but may still be able to offer 30Mb/s or faster writes.You do know to look for the WRITE speeds, don't you? Reading at even a zillion MB/s is useless if it cannot write fast :-)Of course, devices that mandate a certain UHS Speed Class will still require those certified cards.My cameras never get hung up when I am recording, so no "shutter jutter" LOLAn excellent product from an excellent Company.
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30.3.2018

Like 25% cheaper than a sandisk equivalent and like 25% slower, with read of around 650MB/s and write of 16. Using a W95 android device running a speed testing program. Given that the device is meant for watching and streaming large media files, and the performance reflects an almost ideal usage scenario FOR that product, I'm fairly sure my test is meaningless.I've given it five stars despite one glaring imperfection because I can live with it, but the actual storage chip protrudes slightly from the back of the card and it is ugly as sin. That said I don't think it'll ever present a problem for anybody because the W95 has one of the crappiest SD slots I've ever encountered,as the tolerances aren't great so the hole is twice as wide as the internal slot for the card, so it's possible to put the card inside the device, but not in the slot just literally inside the box somewhere rattling around. Even if you successfully get the card in the correct slot, the card is push to insert/release and tends to catch once it's inside. I digress though, it caught on my smooth card and caught equally badly with this.
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25.5.2017

I've tried a load of cheap micro sd and sd cards over the years, and one thing I've learnt is that it's a false economy. You are generally using them to store information of importance to you, usually photos or videos etc that you have taken, so they tend not to be something you want to loose. There is really no point saving money on one if you subsequently go on to lose important data, something I've learnt the hard way of the years. These days I stick to the big brands (Sandisk, toshiba etc) and my like is much better for it. In the very rare occasion I've had an issue (I had a Sandisk card play up)the difference is you can return it after 18 months and still get a prompt replacement from the manufacturer - try doing that with that generic Chinese card you got from ebay.So this Toshiba card comes highly recommend - great speed and I've never once been let down by one, despite using this particular model everyday in both my phone and camera.Highly recommended, you can't go wrong at the current prices either (it was under £35 when I purchased mine) but it does fluctuate a bit.
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17.7.2016

Not a lot you can say about a memory card to be fair so I'll keep it short and sweet.Ought this to go in my excelvan q8 wifi sports action camera which shoots at 4k so I need a card that has decent read and write speeds.This is a 32gb class 10 and has a Speed of 90mbps which is more than adequate to record 4k at 30fps.So far it performs well and works like any decent memory card should, I'm confident that now it's in I won't need to bother with it for a whole now until it fills up, in fact my next purchase for my camera and phones will be the 128gb and 64gb for the action camera.For once the packaging was very easy to open,it had a convenient tab to pull back the plastic it comes in a long with the adapter.I haven't had a chance to put it into my laptop yet using the adapter but I'm positive that it will be faultless.Highly recommend this sd card, it is as good as any of the more expensive ones out there and Toshiba is a well known and respected company, this card is exceptional value for money. Just buy it already!
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22.10.2018

I recently bought a new Nextbase 512GW dash-cam and needed a larger capacity, faster SD card. I'd read a lot of reviews on cards suitable for dash-cams, there are varying reports on whether you need a specific type of card due to the constant write cycles demanded by a dash-cam and also the issue with camera batteries dying mid-write. I found that the Toshiba Exceria range had been covered by a couple of sites and rated highly for being in the middle of the performance/price area for dash-cam performance. The camera seems to have no issue reading and writing to/from the card and transfer speeds seem reasonable when connected to a USB3 port with a micro SD to USB adapter.Longevity and reliability will be key here but only time will tell on that,if I have any problems I'll update this review but from the first couple of weeks of use I have seen no problems with this card.
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1.9.2017

Purchased card for cataloguing my photo collection using my tablet rather than laptop. Was able to format it on tablet then use the adaptor to copy files off laptop. I am only giving 4 stars because the tablet reports only 57.7 Gb. I found out that manufacturers use a different definition of Gb than operating systems use, though that should have given me 59 Gb so guess the other "missing" Gb was probably due to formatting?The card has, however, worked flawlessly for the few months I have had it. It is much easier to shuffle files around and do simple photo edits (eg crop and straighten) using the tablet.I even found an old image of a receipt for a 6.4Gb (yes 6 point 4) harddrive I purchased in 1998 for £164.00.So l obviously think this tiny card is amazing value for money.Highly recommended (provided you do not need exactly 64 Gb)Read full review...
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7.3.2017

I wanted a nice big 128GB Micro SDXC memory card for my Nintendo Switch, and purchased this card prior to delivery. It took a long time for me to pick a card because of the amount of choice we have. All of the companies appear to make similar performance claims to justify their products pricing. Toshiba wants customers to know that it invented flash memory and this should be reassuring to customers, it should be. I found the statistics were pleasing at just under 90/30 MB/s.The Nintendo Switch automatically recognises this memory card and updates itself to support it, there was no need to format the memory card, but I did this in the system storage options menu anyway.Games are automatically downloaded and installed onto the memory card, load times are very fast and there's no detectable lag. I highly recommend chosing this memory card.
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7.9.2017

I've got mine plugged into a Linx 12v64 Tablet PC so I am unable to confirm whether the U3 seeds live up to their specifications as I don't believe the 12V64 supports this.The card arrived in an original, slim Toshiba packaging. Had to use scissors to get into the packaging. It comes with a SD adaptor so you can use it in older devices and card readers should you need.After formatting the card (NTFS, WIndows) you get left with about 57GB in usable capacity, this is normal and not a defect.So far I have my OneDrive (15GB) contents on it and don't see any performance issues when working with files. Copying data to the card is fine too, speeds vary from between 12-25Mb / Sec.depending on the size and type of file.Overall, I am happy with the card as it serves its intended purpose. I have nothing negative to say about it.
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8.5.2017

Sequential read/write speeds are superb for use as media storage such as video, photos, music etc. However the random read/write speeds are too slow to give good performance for applications; for example when used as Android Adoptable Storage, apps kept freezing and overall UI response times were slow or stuttering. On the Raspberry Pi, however, it worked great, which is counter-intuitive as you'd think the slow random speeds would affect Raspbian as much as Android, but there you go. These are particularly good for sequential write speeds, so if you find yourself writing a lot of Raspberry Pi images they're a good choice. But seriously, steer clear if you're thinking of Android Adoptable Storage.As always with memory cards, only buy direct from Amazon and avoid the marketplace to avoid fakes.
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