Surface Pro 2 Micro Sd Slot

Surface Pro 2 Micro Sd Slot Average ratng: 8,6/10 6450 votes
  1. Can someone check to see if the SP4's microSD slot is UHS-II? But a Surface Pro 4 Data Sheet from Microsoft stated that the MicroSD reader is UHS-I.
  2. May 15, 2019 SanDisk's Extreme microSD card slot with 1TB capacity is finally available for purchase. If you own smartphones, laptops or PCs with a microSD or SD card slot like the Microsoft Surface Go.

In addition to the disk space on your Surface, you have external storage options like OneDrive (cloud storage), USB drives, and memory cards.

Surface pro x micro sd

Stay connected & work your way with Surface. Shop the latest innovations: Surface Duo, Surface Laptop Go, Surface Book 3, Surface Go 2, Surface Laptop 3, Surface Pro 7, Surface Pro X, Surface Studio 2 & more. Find helpful customer reviews and review ratings for LINKUP - Surface Pro (3/4/5/6) Compatible SD Card Micro Memory Reader Adapter Hub 6-in-1 Docking Station 2 xUSB-A 3.0 SD/TF/MicroSD 5Gbps Mini Dock Slot Open for Original Power Charging Plug at Amazon.com. Read honest and unbiased product reviews from our users.

How much space do I have on my Surface?

To see how much drive space you have on your Surface:

  • In the taskbar, select File Explorer and select This PC.

The amounts of available free space and total available space are shown. If you're running low on space, the drive will be marked in red.

Note: Pre-installed software and apps use a significant amount of space. To learn how much, see Surface storage.

OneDrive: Cloud storage

OneDrive is free cloud storage that comes with your Microsoft account. It’s like an extra hard drive that’s available from all your devices. For info on using OneDrive, see Using OneDrive on Surface.

Note: OneDrive syncs files from the cloud to your Surface. Syncing or sending data across a mobile broadband connection could result in extra charges. For more info, see Manage your mobile broadband data usage.

Removable storage options

Microsoft Surface Pro Sd Card Slot

You can use USB storage or a microSD card of any size with your Surface to store your documents, music, videos, and pictures. Surface works with standard microSD card formats—microSD, microSDHC, and microSDXC. If you have a Surface Book, you can also use a full-size SD card.

To see what types of SD cards are compatible with your Surface, see What SD cards are compatible with my Surface?

For the locations of the USB port and microSD or SD card slots on your Surface, see Surface features.

Micro Sd Card Surface Pro

To open files from an external device:

  1. Insert a USB flash drive or other USB storage device into the USB port, or insert a microSD or SD card into the card slot on your Surface.

  2. Select the notification that appears in the lower-right corner of the screen.

  3. Select Open device to view files or Sync digital media files to this device.

Use File Explorer on your Surface to browse files and folderson connected devices.

Integrate your file storage with Libraries

Libraries let you browse folders from many locations in one place. For example, you could have documents from several locations on your OneDrive, plus photos and drawings on your Surface, all in one Library. You can even include folders on a connected USB device or microSD card.

Want to create a new library? Here's how:

  1. In the taskbar, select the File Explorer icon .

  2. Open your Libraries folder. If you don't see the folder in the left-side navigation, see Show libraries in File Explorer.

  3. Press and hold (or right-click) an open area in the contents pane, select New, and then select Library.

  4. Enter the name of your new library.

Surface Pro 2 Micro Sd Slot

Adding folders to a library is easy, too.

Best Micro Sd Card For Surface Pro

  1. Press and hold (or right-click) a folder in File Explorer.

  2. Select Include in library, and then select the library you wish to add the folder to.

Surface Pro 2 Micro Sd Slot Card

Related topics

Surface Pro 2 Micro Sd Slot Located Pictures

I bought my first Surface a week ago, an i5 with 128 gig SSD, since the price for the one step larger is quite a bit higher. I figured it would finally be possible to use this as the single unit I wanted, with working (I work as a translator with video files as the source material), reading comicbooks (the 3:2 screen is perfect for that, it beats the cr@p out of the popular, but rather stupid 16:9 format) and general surfing and reading. Until now I've had a few units, amongst them som Android tablets and convertibles.
For storage I will be using the 2 TB drive from my previous working pc, a Dell Presicion M6500 17' monster, as a data disk connected by USB to the server in my house. In working hours the Surface will be hooked up to the new Surface docking, with two monitors, wired network and other niceties. I have also bought a 128 gig Micro SD card, and since I am a bit anal when it comes to backups I wanted to put that to double use. Because I do not take image backups from within Windows. Never. Don't trust them. So I took a 500 meg part of it for a Windows PE setup based on 8.1 ADK and used Acronis True Image to make the PE. No dice. No way to get the thing to boot from it. I have been using a smallish USB stick for this so far (I think it's 16 gig, or something like that), and I have been able to boot, but not without problems. It has to be plugged into the USB port on the side of the unit itself to boot. Not one of the ports in the Surface Docking, and not through an USB hub. That just doesn't work, the unit doesn't see it.
Can anybody tell me if I'm doing something wrong, or if it's simply impossible to boot from a card? I had the idea that the card reader probably was a part of the USB setup, but I may be wrong. It's so hard to see what's going on when I don't see any POST messages, as I'm used to (yeah, I'm old - been in computers since the Commodore 64, with almost all generations of Intel and AMD processors behind me in some computer or other).