Sony Playstation Memory Card

VideoGames : Sony Playstation Memory Card

Sony Playstation Memory Card

from: Sony Computer Entertainment



 : Sony Playstation Memory Card
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Binding: Video Game
Brand: Sony
EAN: 0711719404804
ESRB Age Rating: Everyone
Label: Sony Computer Entertainment
Manufacturer: Sony Computer Entertainment
Platform: PlayStation
Publisher: Sony Computer Entertainment
Studio: Sony Computer Entertainment



Editorial Review:

Product DescriptionOfficial Sony Brand, comes straight from the factory, though packaging may vary. For use with Playstation One and PSX only.




Features:
  • Official Sony Brand, comes straight from the factory, though packaging may vary
  • For use with Playstation One and PSX only
  • Contains 1 MB of memory
  • Works with all Sony PS controllers, and all third party/aftermarket Playstation controllers













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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - Memory Card Gray
It will not save! as long as I play the session it will save, but if I quit, I lose the memory.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Sony Mem Card
This card did exactly what it was supposed to do. It works on my PS2 for the PS1 games and so far I haven't had any problems.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - memory card 1MB for PS1
Normaly they work great accept the two I got from Excess Source which are not meant to work on the US PS2 as they are meant for the Japanese version.
Anyone who wants to play PS1 games on a PS2 will need PS1 memory cards. Please check the back of them to make sure that they have English writing on them.



Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - memory card
The product was satisfactory, but the cost of shipping charged was more than the cost of the item purchased.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Grateful
Though this is not a game but memory card for the old Playstation it is still very relevant today. The difficult part of this is that they are no longer available in your everyday run of the mill electronics store.
I know that I am not alone when I say that I wish that these were still available to purchase at a store in any town or city.
Many of the early games are still available at regular walk-in stores which I believe should still try to make available the old memory cards.
I, yet am grateful that I could rely on the reputation of Amazon and the quality of their subscribers products to provide an opportunity to still have access to the old memory cards. I just wish that by all the technology available today that Sony would make it possible to save the old games in a built-in memory card in the PS3 if at least for the posterity and homage to the original Playstation which got them to where they are today. Thanks Amazon and Gamebargainz for the chance to keep my old Playstation games alive and kicking as fresh as they were wayback in the day.



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Eclipse3.1M3 comes out later today..

A contractor working for the Home Office loses a computer memory stick containing details of tens of thousands of criminals.

1962: NS Savannah, the world's first nuclear-powered cargo-passenger ship, completes its maiden voyage.

In a world terrified by the prospect of nuclear war, the Savannah was meant to demonstrate the peaceful use and positive potential of nuclear power. President Eisenhower conceived the idea as part of his "Atoms for Peace" program in 1955, a time when the United States and Soviet Union were routinely testing increasingly powerful nuclear weapons.

Four nuclear-powered merchant ships were eventually built.

The Savannah, named for the first steamship to cross the Atlantic Ocean in 1819, was in every sense of the word a showcase. The ship was given a sleek, streamlined design that wasn't really compatible with stowing large amounts of cargo, a fact that would eventually shorten its career.

Passenger accommodation was comparable to many conventional liners of the day. There were 30 air-conditioned staterooms, a dining room for 100 people, a swimming pool, a library and a lounge that could be converted into a cinema.

But the heart of the Savannah was its nuclear propulsion system, which at $28 million ($203 million in today's money) cost more than the ship itself, a mere $18.5 million ($134 million today). The Babcock and Wilcox nuclear reactor drove Savannah's two steam-turbine engines cheaply and efficiently.

In the end, though, it wasn't economical enough to offset the tight forward cargo area and other deficiencies that made the ship too expensive to operate commercially. Its tapered bow not only limited the cargo capacity to 8,500 tons -- well below that of contemporary vessels -- but also made loading difficult, especially as ports became more automated.

The Savannah also required a crew of 124, one-third again as large as conventionally powered ships, and those crew members required additional training to work with the propulsion system.

The Maritime Administration, which owned Savannah, leased her in 1965 to American Export-Isbrandtsen Lines for cargo-passenger service. But the ship never turned a profit and was laid up in January 1972. The Savannah spent most of the 1970s tied up in Galveston, Texas, where it underwent regular inspections of its nuclear plant.

Since then, the ship, which has been designated a National Historic Landmark, has become a museum piece in search of a home. Following decommissioning, the nuclear fuel was removed; the process of cleaning out all remaining nuclear contamination continues in a Baltimore shipyard.

When that job is completed sometime in 2011, the Maritime Administration hopes to see Savannah converted into a floating museum. So far, there have been no takers.

Source: Various


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Sony Playstation Memory Card

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