USB 3 and true gigabit Ethernet on the 4 makes it more
like trans warp,
compared to 2b :)
On 22 Jan 2021, at 21:29, August Treubig <atreubig49 at charter.net> wrote:
? Then from 2b to 4 is like warp speed.
Aug.
Sent from my iPad
On Jan 22, 2021, at 1:47 PM, Mark Wickens <mark at wickensonline.co.uk>
wrote:
?
Raspberry Pi is fine, it was the SD card that had failed.
However, the difference between the original Pi and the 2B in terms of
boot speed is quite noticeable!
Regards, Mark.
On Fri, 22 Jan 2021 at 18:57, Dave McGuire <mcguire at neurotica.com> wrote:
On 1/22/21 1:18 PM, Paul Koning wrote:
SSDs can fail, though, especially at modern
densities. I recently saw
a 256 GB microSD card; that boggles the mind. I wonder
what the life
expectancy of one of those is.
Not long. They get away with it because they're primarily intended
for the consumer market, and with the throwaway mentality that salesmen
have cultivated, combined with today's short attention spans, nobody
even seems to care when they fail.
Modern politically correct solder can be
problematic too. "Lead free"
processes are less reliable than real
soldering. For years, maybe still,
lead free solder was not acceptable for space applications. Perhaps that
has been cured by now, I don't know and don't care. (I was told quite
directly by a professional "if you are required to use lead free solder, do
so. If you aren't required, avoid it.")
I myself do care, as I do commercial design and manufacturing. Lead
free solder is still awful by every meaningful metric, and that
situation is not likely to improve. Fortunately, "lead free", when
applied to an assembly, only means "contains less than some percentage
of lead by weight", so most PCBs can actually be manufactured with
lead-bearing solder. I assemble mine using lead-bearing solder.
Remember the Toyota Prius accelerator failure that killed all those
people? That was caused by lead-free solder.
I do like SSDs. My home firewall, DECnet router,
and Subversion server
is a fanless (heat sink cooled industrial type) SSD based PC
running
Linux. Unlike its plain consumer PC predecessor, it has no objections at
all to spending its life in a dusty basement.
I've found SSDs to be a lot less reliable than spinning disks. I
still use them for reasons of speed and power consumption, but I do more
frequent backups.
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
New Kensington, PA