Hardware: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 23: | Line 23: | ||
| Example || Example || Example || vfat | | Example || Example || Example || vfat | ||
|} | |} | ||
According to the Slo Bytes USB Flash Drives report from Brian K. Lewis, flash drives are capable of handling 10 thousand to 10 million write and erase operations during their lifetime, depending on the source as well as the specific USB drive. Regardless, a flash drive typically will outlast any standard hard drive. The main concerns about the life expectancy of a flash drive are damage from neglect and becoming lost or stolen. | * The problem of unstability in Patriot XT's ext3 partition is not related to ext3 partition because if I switch the partition of ext2 and ext3, then the slowness goes to ext2. | ||
* According to the Slo Bytes USB Flash Drives report from Brian K. Lewis, flash drives are capable of handling 10 thousand to 10 million write and erase operations during their lifetime, depending on the source as well as the specific USB drive. Regardless, a flash drive typically will outlast any standard hard drive. The main concerns about the life expectancy of a flash drive are damage from neglect and becoming lost or stolen. |
Revision as of 22:07, 28 November 2012
- Zotac ZBOXNANO
- samsung pico projector sp-h03. LED, 30 ANSI lumen.
- Arduino motor spin
- USB device speed comparison
Device | Read | Write | FS |
---|---|---|---|
MicroCenter4G | Example | 12.77MB/s | Ext3 |
MicroCenter4G | Example | 5MB/s | vfat |
Patriot XT 32G USB3.0 | Example | 50MB/s | vfat |
Patriot XT 32G USB3.0 | Example | 24MB/s | ntfs |
Patriot XT 32G USB3.0 | Example | 139MB/s | ext2 |
Patriot XT 32G USB3.0 | Example | 50~100MB/s | ext3 |
Patriot XT 32G USB3.0 | Example | 140MB/s | ext4 |
Example | Example | Example | vfat |
- The problem of unstability in Patriot XT's ext3 partition is not related to ext3 partition because if I switch the partition of ext2 and ext3, then the slowness goes to ext2.
- According to the Slo Bytes USB Flash Drives report from Brian K. Lewis, flash drives are capable of handling 10 thousand to 10 million write and erase operations during their lifetime, depending on the source as well as the specific USB drive. Regardless, a flash drive typically will outlast any standard hard drive. The main concerns about the life expectancy of a flash drive are damage from neglect and becoming lost or stolen.