What do You Primarily Keep on Your MicroSD Card?
What do You Primarily Keep on Your MicroSD Card? Welcome to a Medical Battery specialist of the EXFO Battery
Thanks to numerous polls we have conducted in the past, we know where on the list of importance your phone having a microSD card is; extremely high. In fact, we have many readers who will apparently skip a device entirely if it does not feature expandable storage, but for others, it is much less of a deal breaker.
With Google and Motorola releasing the Nexus 6 with only two models, a 32GB and 64GB storage option, the lack of a microSD card slot may be a big deal. For the larger 64GB storage option, the price goes up another $50 to $699, which could be a deterrent to a few potential buyers with battery scuh as Micronix MB-300 Battery, Micronix MSA338 Battery, Micronix MSA358 Battery, TSI DustTrak II 8532 Battery, TSI DustTrak II 530EP Battery, TSI DustTrak DRX 8530 Battery, TSI DustTrak DRX 8534 Battery, Comen CM1200A Battery, Comen CM1200B Battery, GE Eagle Monitor 1008 Battery, GE Eagle Monitor 1009 Battery, TSI 9350 Battery. Keep in mind, 32GB of onboard storage will likely leave you with 22-27GB depending on the size of the system.
To make this short, we want to know what you need all of that additional microSD storage for. Do you need to have your music library with you at all times, unwilling to use precious data to stream it? Do you need countless photo galleries on your person at all times? Do you enjoy downloading large file games to your device?
The question is, what has you folks absolutely needing a microSD card on your phone? In the comments, please feel free to elaborate on your particular situation.
Motorola is hosting a press event tomorrow morning at 9am in London, with the plan reportedly being to introduce the world to the Moto E, a low-end device which should be priced even lower than the Moto G. Motorola’s goal will be to kill off dumb phones once and for all, allowing the entire world to access an extremely low-priced smartphone with connectivity to the world wide web and Google Play.
Of course, with a price tag that could be around $99 (or even lower), Motorola had to cut a few corners in the specs department, without sacrificing overall performance and features. The device is reported to feature a dual-core processor, 1GB of RAM, dual-SIM slots, 4.3″ display (probably not HD), 5MP rear-facing camera, 4GB of on-onboard storage (expandable with microSD slot), WiFi/3G/Bluetooth, and runs Android 4.4 “Kit Kat.”
To add to the excitement, @evleaks posted yet another render of the Moto E – this time in White.
Since the event is taking place on London time, most Americans may be snoozing when the device is announced at 9am in the morning, but don’t worry, we will have all of the information available for you when the device is announced.

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