Correct Treatment of your MMC:
Physically, memory cards are quite fragile pieces of high technology,
susceptible to damage from various silly things like excessive heat,
condensation, strong magnetic fields, physical damage from rough handling
and/or bending! (similar to most electronic devices then..)
Given the natue of mobile memory card products, they are constantly being
taken in and out of some form of interface with a mobile phone, a camera, a
laptop, or desktop PC, or a separate memory card reader. The number of
different devices they have to be able to interact with is in the thousands.
It is not too surprisingly, then that sometimes the state of the file system
on the memory card can get damaged.
This may happen for a number of different reasons, including:
> removing the card from a device whilst an application is trying to
read/write to it.. (Just be patient...)
> battery drain on a device whilst in use meaning an insufficent voltage
failure whilst writing to the card.
> a poor implementation of the MMC standard on the device using the card
> poor connectivity software drivers on the device or the Windows PC/Mac
> physical damage like card or device being dropped, bent, getting wet
etc...
> lots of others i am sure..
As often as not, the problem is not terminal for your memory card, but just
a software issue ( or in physical terms, it could be called "a temporary
disalignment of the all the bits and bytes on the card").
The fix for this problem is the same as for any other file storage device
(like a floppy or hard drive) with corrupt or invalid file system, namely;
re-format the file system.
Re-Formatting your MobyMemory MMC Card:
It is possible that your mobile will offer you the option of formatting the
memory card if it is found to be invalid. (However, the likes of Nokia nGage,
Nokia 6600, and Siemens Sx1 often just prefer to reject the media as
corrupted).
In that case, to format the card, you will need access to one or more of the
following:
> A Windows PC or Mac.
> A separate multi-format memory card reader (verify that it is compatible
with the MultiMediaCard -MMC- standard).
> (This can come in USB or PCMCIA flavours. If USB, try and ensutre it is a
USB2 device.
> Alternatively, many of the newest laptop and desktop PCs now come with
integrated Multi-format memory card readers.
> If you are using a separate memory card reader, then connect it up to your
PC, and let windows recgnize the device through plug-and-play.
Now you can insert your MobyMemory card into the appropriate slot in the
memory card reader. (Please note that because the MMC card is pretty much
symmetrical it is very easy to insert it upside-down in the slot).
Open up [Windows Explorer] (or the equivalent for MAC users..sorry not
well-versed in OS X).
There should be at least one icon visible for a [Removable Drive] in the
list of available drives. (in fact, there is often a list of about 5 or 6
Removable drives, one for each of the different Memory card formats that
your reader is compatible with).
Find the drive that is mapped to the MMC card by clicking on each in turn
until it confirms there is a drive present. (Sometimes it is easiest to do
this by trying a fully-functional MMC card in the MMC slot first so you can
confirm which drive letter it is.)
(NB. It will always be labelled as a [Removable Drive], don't mistake it for
one of your PC hard drives like [C:] drive, as that could be catastrophic
later on!)
At this stage it may give an error message saying that the drive is
unreadable.
By right-clicking on the drive letter, it will provide the option of
formatting the drive.
Select format the drive, and the [Format Drive] dialog will appear
(Double-check again to make sure it not your [C:] drive!).
There is only one setting to focus on in this page, and that is to ensure
that the FileSystem selected for formatting is the [FAT] option (not FAT32,
or NTFS or any other option)
(Note: All mobile phones, to my knowledge, and most cameras (etc..) use the
FAT file system (or at least are compatible with it) on their memory card
media.)
Now click on Format Now ( ensure [Quick Format] is not selected as this will
not actually restore the file system space byte by byte, but only resets the
header information so the drive thinks its empty again. This may not be
enought to solve your corruption problem.)
The PC will now - hopefully!- chug away happily until it has restored the
memory card space back to its original configuration (of course, any
information on there is long gone by now!).
If you recieve an error message back from the [Format Now] request, then
your problem may be more permanent, and not just a software issue. In this
case, it may still respond to a format request in a different memory card
reader or device.
If you believe it to be a failure of manufacture, then the warranty on the
card offers the prospect of a replacement card, subject to a confirmation of
the fault upon return of the goods.