On my Mac Book Pro I simply slotted the Sonnet express card PCI bus expansion adapter into the express card slot and then connected this to the main QIO unit via the extension cable and installed the drivers, again a 5 minute job, very simple. Description: This software enables the use of Qio with Mac Pro and MacBook Pro computers with a PCIe slot or ExpressCard slot, respectively, and other Mac. Expand and Secure Your Mac Pro The latest Mac Pro® is an object of desire, but a lustrous finish hides its true beauty within—massive power. If you’re a pro user in the video or audio industries, the Mac Pro offers the power you need, but lacks the built-in expandability you count on. I approached Sonnet and requested a loan QIO for this review, which Sonnet provided. I was not paid to write this and the views expressed are entirely my own. Speed tests were conducted using my own SxS (blue) cards with the QIO attached to a 1.1 first generation Mac Pro with an internal 4 drive raid array, or with a 15″ Mac Book Pro.
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Just thought I'd pass this info along since I just struggled with this issue and maybe someone else is having the same problem (or is thinking about a QIO). So I opted for the Sonnet QIO reader when I purchased my HPX250 last week. I got the 64 GB cards and hoped I'd be rockin' and rollin' right out of the box. The Sonnet QIO is a cool little device which allows for pretty fast transfer of SD, CF, SxS, and yes, P2.
But apparently, not in a 64 bit Mac OS environment. The other card types work just fine, but not the P2. This was news to me, and I felt like I had just wasted 700 bucks on a P2 reader that doesn't read P2 cards.
So why not just boot into 32 bit mode on my Mac? Well, I tried that too.