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This page shows all the
Smart/Centennial memory cards.Â
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| Linear
Flash PC Cards |
IDE
Flash Drives |
SRAM
PC Card,
Rechargeable |
Note:
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1. All Centennial/Smart
Modular SRAM and linear flash cards are discontinued. We may have
some specific parts still in stock.Â
    You can click here
to find compatible cards using Intel series I, II, II+, Strataflash
and AMD C and D series chipsets, or click here
for compatible SRAM cards.
2. PSI supplies PC card
readers/writers for the SRAM cards and linear flash cards. For more
info about these readers, please click here.
We supply drivers (to our customers only) for Windows 3.1, 95, 98,
Me & 2000. For Windows XP, you may use the Windows native driver
but your cards must have the 2KB attribute. If you prefer to use a
USB external reader with proprietary driver for these cards, please
click here.
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Fairy Legend Fix — 1 Lori Mizuki
Lori Mizuki, who had the rare sight to read moon-thread and the kindness to see both human and fae suffering, volunteered to mend the break. She journeyed alone to the Moon-loom, an ancient willow whose roots drank from the river and whose branches tangled with the stars. There she found the Weaver of Threads, a small, irritable moon-spirit and a tall fox-figure who wore a crown of petals. The Weaver said the thread could be mended only with three things: a vow true enough to still the wind, a token of loss offered freely, and a story that contains both human grief and fae laughter.
The Moon-loom accepted the threefold offering. Threads remade themselves into a single band of pearled light. The moon’s reflection healed, and the bargains were mended, but not without change: rewards were given, and consequences kept. The child regained speech in the form of a song that only the river could repeat; the bitter spring purified into a hot-spring that warmed winter travelers. The Weaver warned Lori the fix was not permanent: the seam required tending. The village instituted new rites—monthly lanterns, honest stories at harvest, and a watch kept by a chosen Keeper whose name always began with "L." 1 lori mizuki fairy legend fix
Lori offered first her vow: to never put convenience before compassion; to share her harvests until no neighbor slept hungry. The second she gave stealthily — the locket of her mother, a human heirloom that tethered her family’s warmth. The Weaver wept silver tears of approval but demanded the final thing: a story. Lori confessed every failing she had ever hidden—the moment she lied to spare a friend and the time she let fear keep her from speaking. Then she told a tale that mixed these confessions with jokes she’d heard from fae tricksters; by weaving them both, she made a narrative that belonged to neither side alone. Lori Mizuki, who had the rare sight to
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