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Square Credit Card Reader For Iphone 15

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Square Credit Card Reader For Iphone 15

2024-04-03 05:53:33

This is an authentic Apple card to iPhone reader for iPhone 15 or higher, or any iPad with a USB-C connection. Simple to use.

5
2024-08-08 04:51:23

A tile as thin as a credit card that I can keep in my wallet! No more' butt dialing' my iphone!

5
2024-05-12 05:30:51

I love this bag. I use this to store my iPhone X, ID, credit card, and cash in my jersey pocket when I ride. I never have any moisture in it during any parts of my ride. I'll say that the face recognition doesn't work 100% as the bag gets scuffed over time, but I've had the same issue with some protective cases with clear face covers (ex: Otterbox/LifeProof). Will definitely be planning to get more of these in the future.

5
2024-08-16 07:25:18

i was perfect , i m wating the credit card

5
2024-04-24 02:25:24

I like the black redesign, it's length is now that of a credit card and i am all for it!

5
2024-08-06 03:16:31

Your mileage may vary. Warning: The rest of this review is a total geekshow, on how to test the cards and get good speeds out of your PC. I tested them on a late model Dell XPS 15, 9570, running Win10 PRO 64, using the OEM internal card reader. Cards were tested using the excellent H2Testw v1.4 shareware. However, I found the speed to be very sensitive to format and partition parameters. One of my cards was ghastly slow out of the box. (66 MB/S read & write) It took some digging around to find that the format parameters were the same but the offset on the disk partitions was not. I repartitioned the slow card with an offset of 16384kb, using the DISKPART utility and then formatted exFAT with allocation unit size of 128kb to match the good card. That worked. Note: Formatting the card in my EM-1 produced a usable but slow card. Formatting it as described above producced a card my EM-1 could use and that blazed when reading back files. It also seems that maximum read and write speeds depend on driver and firmware updates, especially when using an external USB card reader. Of course, you have to have a UHS-II reader to get the full speeds. It may not be worth the hassle to tweak everything up right, but the cards do perform very well if you do. (the spec sheet only promises 80/250. So getting 100/250 was a nice surprise) For these kinds of speeds, there are data bottlenecks lurking everywhere. The XPS 15's internal drive had the highest speeds of the several reads and PCs I tested, so that's what I used to exercise the cards. Lessons learned: 1: Try several readers on several PCs, with different format types before you decide that a card is bad or slow. 2: when you get a fast configuration, *document* it. (I used the detail disk and detail part commands in diskpart)

5
2024-08-29 04:41:11

IPHONE TC READER

5
2024-09-29 08:22:54

The OTG card reader is a plus!

5
2024-07-23 05:33:37

Works well, only wish it would come with the appropriate card reader.

5
2024-07-08 04:56:19

A very fast card reader!

5