Help identify

Any idea what pic related is?
The number shows it's NAND flash memory.
Is there a way to know what's in it? Or how to read the data?

Attached: IMG_20190722_100700.jpg (2976x3968, 2.37M)

Other urls found in this thread:

mitas-tyres.com/de/produkte/em-mpt-industriereifen/mitas/gabelstapler/fl-01/
elinux.org/images/a/ab/Tc58dvm82a1ft.pdf
thetazzbot.com/2016/01/11/magic-sing-karaoke-microphone-tear-down/
twitter.com/SFWRedditGifs

Or what's the connector type?

Attached: IMG_20190722_100755.jpg (2976x3968, 2.14M)

Last pic.
I found it in my backbag yesterday.

Attached: IMG_20190722_101017.jpg (2976x3968, 2.5M)

It's from 2004, forget it.

This is one of the few times that I'd unironically recommend you to ask Reddit instead. Jow Forums threads don't last long enough for an actual expert to drift by.

stick it in a pci port and see what happens

where did you get that. get rid of it. you don't want to continue down this path. if mods were awake this thread would be cleaned. ya'll need to forget what you saw here.

I believe this is a game cartridge for one of the portables from early 2000s.

Put a quarter next to it. Looks like a gba cartridge.

Reminds me of the DOMs or Disk-On-Modules I had to work with some time ago, we used them to give SSD upgrades to embedded 386/486 based systems. We just put the module directly into the IDE controller port and it worked. Maybe it works the same with SCSI or PCI?

Looks like an ass trench scrubber

I believe that is a tool used for cold dumping the memory state of a system via PCI.

Used by feds when they v& u later

Attached: 1246545149101.png (400x604, 310K)

I think you've found the cartridge with the Internet on it

Some sort of Gameboy cartridge, GB Advance or Mini

The DS and DS Lite browsers used a RAM cartridge you would plug into the GBA slot, but I'm not sure if that's what this is.

Looks like a proprietary edge connector. It's NOT a game cartridge and it's NOT a disk-on-module since it's just a bare Flash chip with no supporting circuitry, it cannot be hot-plugged.

But since it's a standard 8-bit parallel flash chip, you can get an edge connector receptacle and wire it to something like an Arduino to read it.

Attached: +_2ad49e80aaf217c71b1db81913c5acad.jpg (1130x678, 59K)

Nope.
I tested it.
Nice t ry at obscurity, department of home land security
My thoughts exactly.
Looking at the data sheet, it should have about 32 MB of storage.
BIOS for some sort of device? Since it should be read-only.
I'll go looking for something, if this thread still up, I'll post updates.

Nah, I have one and it looks different

Attached: IMG_20190722_1245157.jpg (4056x2704, 2.58M)

>it's memory!
>non volatile memory!
>it will overwrite existing memory!
>i'm telling you the truth!

Wow retards this wasn't that hard
mitas-tyres.com/de/produkte/em-mpt-industriereifen/mitas/gabelstapler/fl-01/

Looks very much like the flash chips that went in konami's Digital 573 boards.

They look the same except yours has a case.

The OP one loks narrower and has 20 pins, while the GBA one has 32 pins

elinux.org/images/a/ab/Tc58dvm82a1ft.pdf

its simple but you'd need a microcontroller to read it

lmao have fun with all those MOSFET level shifters if you want to use a 5V micro.

Attached: this one is the 3.3V one.png (1276x540, 95K)

Nintendo satelliteview cardridge

Attached: Screen_Shot_20190508_at_10.37.07.jpg (1648x930, 167K)

looking up "statellite" has made me aware of how often people misspell satellite

op already identified it as being NAND Flash, not S/D RAM
flash and ram aren't the same technology

looks like old micro sodimm

Jow Forums knows fuck all about hardware

everything has already been identified and even datasheet posted and yet retards like still chime in

Attached: EEPROM the non-volatile spider.jpg (600x600, 54K)

There's no shortage of dirt cheap 3.3V controllers like Arduino Pro Mini, STM32 Bluepill or ESP8266.

judging from the nondescript casing and exposed edge connector, it's probably some internal, replacable component
a flash module could be use for all kinds of things though, anything that warrants swapping out some data from a unit could use something exactly like this

here's one i found with the same connector type (standard 50mil pitch, 40-pins, double-sided card-edge), it a song cartridge for a karaoke machine
thetazzbot.com/2016/01/11/magic-sing-karaoke-microphone-tear-down/

Attached: 20150113_200329-e1452476026860-576x1024.jpg (576x1024, 127K)

Make sense.
I'll see if I can find something likely that.