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Re: solid state storage device with USB type-A plug for use as OS drive (was Re: Installation "Bullseye")



On 2/10/22 01:37, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
On Wed, Feb 09, 2022 at 06:50:49PM -0800, David Christensen wrote:

I am looking for a small (~16 GB), low power, high-endurance, solid-state
storage device with a USB 1.0/1.1/2.0/3.0+ type-A plug, powered by a USB
1.0/1.1/2.0/3.0+ type-A receptacle, which is designed to be used as a system
drive.  I would use it to install and run commercial and FOSS OS's (Windows,
macOS, Debian and FreeBSD) on SBC's, laptops, tablets, desktops,
workstations, servers, etc..



Corsair do a ruggedised USB stick - starts at 16G or 32G if you can find them
  - I think which is USB 3.1
and blazingly fast but expensive. I got the Corsair 128 GB Voyager GTX


The Corsair Flash Voyager® GTX USB 3.1 128GB Premium Flash Drive looks like it has SSD performance. But, I do not see any endurance specifications.


What's high-endurance in your terms?


I am unable to find manufacturer specifications to quantify what "high endurance" means, but I do own a 128 GB SanDisk High Endurance microSD card and that is where I heard the phrase:

https://www.westerndigital.com/products/memory-cards/sandisk-high-endurance-uhs-i-microsd#SDSQQNR-032G-GN6IA


So, another option is to use this SD card with machines that have an SDXC port, or to use this SD card with a USB adapter for machines that do not.


As an alternative, StarTech makes two USB to sata adapter/ cables.  I need
to do more search to see if my SSD's are compatible:

https://www.startech.com/en-us/hdd/usb3s2sat3cb

https://www.startech.com/en-us/hdd/usb312sat3cb


I think I've got one of these which is running to an old SSD and is alos fine.


Okay.


David


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