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SanDisk has introduced new, lower prices for its Shoot & Store line of flash storage cards that are sold in supermarkets, drug stores and other mass-merchant outlets.
I normally wouldn't consider the purchase of a 32MB or 64MB SD or Compact flash card. However, if I was standing in line at the grocery store or drug store and saw one in the check out line for $9.99 or $14.99, I think I'd go ahead and get one At that price, why not? "Effective August 30 in the U.S. market, the 50-photo* (32-megabyte) card, priced previously at $14.99, now has a suggested retail price of $9.99. The price of a 100-photo* (64MB) Shoot & Store card has been reduced from $24.99 to $14.99. These price changes are being applied throughout the Shoot & Store product lineup, which consists of CompactFlash(R), SD(TM), Memory Stick PRO(TM) and, in the next 30 days, xD-Picture Card(TM) (in 32MB capacity).
Shoot & Store, introduced in February, is aimed at consumers who want the convenience of leaving their flash cards with professional photo finishers or who don't want to download images to a computer or a disk. In the U.S. alone, this line of affordable cards is currently sold in more than 10,000 stores."