On 10/08/2016 09:20 AM, jdd wrote:
Le 08/10/2016 à 14:46, Anton Aylward a écrit :
There's a tool that re-writes the chip ID info and so I made sure that theses 8G chips said they were 8G.
nevr tried that
Well those 32g-that-really-were-8g for f3fix'd to say they were 8g and have proven reliable as 8g devices. It hardly seems worth it, though. Not much better than DVDs for nbackup, only use as 'emergency' for my camera.
as you can see in my page, speed is also a problem, but interfaces makes it very difficult to solve
With an adaptor and USB carrier to the front of my PC, yes speed is awful. Regular readers will recall that i rip my DVDs so that I can put them on these cards and watch them on my tablet in more relaxed circumstances. An 8G card can, if I'm not using it for anything else (as in dedicated swap-out/swap-in mode) I can fit 4, maybe 5, and possible a Youtube excerpt on the 8G cards. But copying from the PC to the card of even a couple is an over-night project. This is a hardware issue, those adapters may be OK for use in a camera and retain speed, but the USB i/f is limiting. And these chaper cards are not blazingly fast. Adequate for extending the phone's memory and for movies and storing text, but not recording streaming video. -- A: Yes. > Q: Are you sure? >> A: Because it reverses the logical flow of conversation. >>> Q: Why is top posting frowned upon? -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org