J
Jan Panteltje
Guest
On a sunny day (Fri, 27 Jan 2023 09:58:08 -0800) it happened John Larkin
<jlarkin@highlandSNIPMEtechnology.com> wrote in
<4j38th953mtiop5d0ui0tf4q961p2696uh@4ax.com>:
These are, I found some compare and tests at tomshardware.com
But this one was so cheap because of the slow write times,
But for writng date from CDs or Bluray and mainly storage use, this is just fine.
For a HD camera recording likely not.
The newer ones mostly seem to have those small USB connectors that fit into you smartphone.
Some also have memory buffers..
<jlarkin@highlandSNIPMEtechnology.com> wrote in
<4j38th953mtiop5d0ui0tf4q961p2696uh@4ax.com>:
On Fri, 27 Jan 2023 17:31:18 GMT, Jan Panteltje <alien@comet.invalid
wrote:
For about 75 Euro (is about the same in US dollars) I bought a 1 TB USB stick...
Very small thing, smaller than my thumb.
Interesting, put Linux ext4 filesystem on it and ran some tests,
sort of half expected it to be fake, but writing a 500 GB test file worked,
so spend some time using it to create backups so as to have something that
you can carry with you....
All of my website, email, code I wrote and one old CD after the other..
Write speed is slow, but read speed seems high enough for HD video.
And it fits in my Raspberry Pi4... or any recent Linux laptop.
http://panteltje.com/pub/1TB_USB_stick_closed_IXIMG_0927.JPG
http://panteltje.com/pub/1TB_USB_stick_open_IXIMG_0929.JPG
Old USB socket!
So also discovered all my CD-R I burned back in about 2002, so 21 years ago (for the mamaticians)
still read 100% and mostly at high speed on my LG M-Disc reader....
All optical media is stored in light proof alu box...
I mean I am used to high capacity, have 2 4 TB harddisks and 2 1 TB harddisks in use,
but those suck current, make a little noise too and are relatively big
and fragile (dropping is not good for drives),
but this is really small and you can drop it as often as you like...
Who needs cloud storage? carry it anywhere,
I have encrypted the USB stick with latest kwantuum particles of course...
Most suckers that find it will run MS windows, not sure that even recognizes ext4 filesystem?
Anyone know?
We use several-terabyte USB hard drives for backup, roughly $25 per
tbyte. I guess we could cut over to flash sticks and save some storage
volume. A full backup is just under a tB and creeps up over time as we
release more products.
Aren\'t the flash drives slower to write?
These are, I found some compare and tests at tomshardware.com
But this one was so cheap because of the slow write times,
But for writng date from CDs or Bluray and mainly storage use, this is just fine.
For a HD camera recording likely not.
The newer ones mostly seem to have those small USB connectors that fit into you smartphone.
Some also have memory buffers..