this is impressive, seems that SDUC is just a specification so it applies to both full-size and micro SD cards. I don't know of many devices that still support full-size but I hope to one day see a 128TB microSD card. Not sure how they'll figure it out, last I check the biggest size Sandisk sells is 2TB tho the article mentions we'll be seeing 4TB+ cards soon.
What worries me, given my time with the raspberry pi, is reliability. They seem prone to random failure, not that I've personally ever had a card die on me (and it seems that even in failure they lock into read only mode so you don't lose data?), but it seems that there's no standard way to check the health of the card like you can with SSDs using SMART data. This makes me hesitant to trust larger-capacity SD cards for data tho I know of some industrial cards that seem to have some kind of support for viewing card health but I feel safer with small capacities since there's less to lose if something goes wrong but faster speeds are always a plus.
I have always wondered why is that my dashcam in car uses same basic 32GB sdcard for writing multiple gigabytes of data every day during summer and winter without any problems, but when it comes to raspberry pi or its clones everyone starts to suggest to even avoid a few kb of logs written to sdcard to be on the safe side somehow. ( my theory is that all negativity related to sdcards come from flaky power supplies and straight up counterfeits on amazon ).
Even if you do a small update on a file you'll have to write an entire block so updating multiple small files all day long will trigger a lot more bytes to be written.
SD cards are optimized for things like camera's and music players where the contents are larger files written in a single pass.
R-pis are particularly hard on SD cards. I think they must be engaging in lots of writes in the course of operation.
I have a number of projects that just use microcontrollers with SD cards, no OS involved, so no unexpected writes to the card. Some of them have been in constant operation for many years, and I have yet to see an SD card failure in any of them.
>cards up to 128TB and up to 985MB/s speeds
this is impressive, seems that SDUC is just a specification so it applies to both full-size and micro SD cards. I don't know of many devices that still support full-size but I hope to one day see a 128TB microSD card. Not sure how they'll figure it out, last I check the biggest size Sandisk sells is 2TB tho the article mentions we'll be seeing 4TB+ cards soon.
What worries me, given my time with the raspberry pi, is reliability. They seem prone to random failure, not that I've personally ever had a card die on me (and it seems that even in failure they lock into read only mode so you don't lose data?), but it seems that there's no standard way to check the health of the card like you can with SSDs using SMART data. This makes me hesitant to trust larger-capacity SD cards for data tho I know of some industrial cards that seem to have some kind of support for viewing card health but I feel safer with small capacities since there's less to lose if something goes wrong but faster speeds are always a plus.
I have always wondered why is that my dashcam in car uses same basic 32GB sdcard for writing multiple gigabytes of data every day during summer and winter without any problems, but when it comes to raspberry pi or its clones everyone starts to suggest to even avoid a few kb of logs written to sdcard to be on the safe side somehow. ( my theory is that all negativity related to sdcards come from flaky power supplies and straight up counterfeits on amazon ).
Even if you do a small update on a file you'll have to write an entire block so updating multiple small files all day long will trigger a lot more bytes to be written. SD cards are optimized for things like camera's and music players where the contents are larger files written in a single pass.
R-pis are particularly hard on SD cards. I think they must be engaging in lots of writes in the course of operation.
I have a number of projects that just use microcontrollers with SD cards, no OS involved, so no unexpected writes to the card. Some of them have been in constant operation for many years, and I have yet to see an SD card failure in any of them.
> Linux 6.13 Supports Ultra Capacity SD Cards "SDUC" for 2 to 128 TB Storage
Are there any reliability figures for those cards ?