Just starting the video. My take before watching: microSD card is to the Pi, what the floppy drive was to the original IBM PC. As soon as Hard Drives were available, people mostly stopped booting off the floppies, and started using them as external storage and for transferring files between computers. If I had anything newer than a Pi3B+, I would be booting off a proper SSD instead of the microSD.
I've said this all along and I'll continue pounding this home: Buy sdcard suitable for the job and they'll last just as long and be much cheaper. For the Raspberry Pi (or any sbc) that means only sdcards with an application rating of preferably A2, and you're golden. The performance difference to a real ssd is pretty small but if you don't need much space sdcards are much cheaper. A2 rated sdcards are much better than most people are used to, it's very much worth a try. The problem with people recommending all kitted out raspberry pi's is that once you reach the price of a cheap x86 based mini pc the pi just can't compete there
Eh. When I had roommates I had my Linux box still using Loadlin to boot, no MBR on the disk, so that after I booted off floppy I'd take the floppy out and put it away. This way when I shut the computer down no one else could boot it up in a misguided attempt to use it since it would stop right after the POST.
It's so careless of a creator's part to say such a thing as Micro SD becomes straight up obsolete without specifying for what purpose it became obsolete. And he even hearted your comment. Is he shameless or is it just autoheart?
Jeff I liked how to mentioned Chris at Explaining Computers. Between the both of you I learned enough to get my PI4 running and enjoy all the tips and advice as well as the product reviews.
The Pi Zero 2 pretty much covers what the original Pi could do, a 1gb version would close the gap. The 5 is so much more than the original SBC but I think you're right, there is still a desire for low end versions.
@@nikobellic570so how do these M.2 hats work...don't they pull power from the PCIe interface or GPIO pins? Some may take an auxiliary power connection, but not all would.
First reaction was that I found it odd when the email from Pi Hut and Pimoroni arrived this morning that the Pi Foundation had ignored the 2280 format drives in favour of the more expensive 2230 & 2242 sizes. Compact yes, but generally harder to find over the established 2280 format drives from Samsung, WD, etc.
They're a little more rare, but I think more will come to market since the size is seeing a comeback with portable gaming handhelds and SBCs. I've already seen the launch of four new 2242 size boards, and about 8 2230, in the past two years.
@@JeffGeerling About £70-£80 in the UK currently for a 1Tb model (2230), so a slight premium. Just couldn't fathom why they left out the 2280 option initially. Still going to order one of course!
I had the same though as you did. I feel like an issue with raspis now is that they really want to keep compatibility between all the hats and stuff. I wouldn't mind if they changed the form factor, broke compatibility but had a 2280 nvme slot on the bottom, perhaps another format for the gpios, normal sized hdmi ports, and all ports on one side. Or I don't know, release a model C with all of these. Now the issue is with how cheap n100 computers are getting, compared to the price hike of the pis. Justifed Price hike for sure, but renders it less competitive. If I need gpio stuff, I am almost always better with a pi Pico, and have it either communicate via usb with the host computer, or via WiFi or Bluetooth. The one pi that is still in a very unique spot is the zero line. Hard to find anything else that runs Linux that well, for so cheap, low power, and with gpio.
If history serves, it will be similar to how full sized SD cards were gradually supplanted by microSD. Manufactures are already ramping up offerings for handheld gaming devices like the Steamdeck.
@@AudreyRobinel Honestly, I've kind of thought they should branch into two versions of the Pi, Keep the current standard the same (aside from going back to one large HDMI instead of two, and bring back the analog audio jack). Then they could release a Pi Pro or something of the like that's maybe twice the size or a little bit larger to accommodate the additional ports that may be needed. They kind of did the opposite with the Pi Zero, it would be nice to see them take it a little the other direction without going too far. That larger one could include more/faster PCI-E lanes with a built in M.2, one full size HDMI and one mini so you still have the option to use two displays, but aren't eating up a ton of room with the second connector while maintaining more standard connection for the first. For the Pro, I'd target $100 to $150 for the board. It's a bit more, but also more capable.
@@JeffGeerling Yeah, but the eMMC conversion rate is really low right now, so I'm invested in flash cards right now :P Also, OP, don't edit your comment, or you'll lose the context for these comments as well as Jeff's "heart."
I'm a big fan of the ArgonONE cases and accessories. The new V3 with NVMe add-on is just such a clean and professional look, and the machined aluminium-alloy direct contact case siphons off heat better than any case I've used that wasn't a tower-cooler design. Plus once it's bundled up, you can still easily access the SSD slot through a heatsink plate on the bottom. My only complaint is that it took just over a month to arrive directly from China because US supplies were unavailable.
I clicked on this video expecting Jeff to argue NVMe as a replacement for MicroSD's as a portable drive device. Sadly, that was not the case. Still a very informative video.
I mean, arguing about prices per terabyte already misses the point when it comes to Pi boot drives. Most Pis out there aren't using their system for chunky storage, and the advantage of MicroSD isn't cost-per-GB efficiency - it's just cost. You can get 5 64GB MicroSDs for $15, and for people with a ton of embedded Pis and Pi Zeros around the place, that's a strong value proposition. Obviously if you're using your Pi for performance sensitive and storage sensitive work, yeah a MicroSD isn't going to cut it. But if you just want a boot drive to run a daemon or two from RAM, NVMe requires more hardware, more expensive drives, for performance you won't use.
6:43 - there is a low lane count asmedia PCIe gen 3 switch - the ASM2806A. It's the same switch used in the Asus FLASHTOR 6&12 m.2 disk NAS units, along with a number of multi-controller USB and SATA cards. They do use quite a bit more power than gen 2 switches. Most implementations I've seen require heatsinks. I also imagine they cost quite a bit more.
Haha well good on you for not contributing to ewaste by buying something you don't have a need for! CM4 is still a great little machine. And I run a couple 4B's where I need a little speed but not something crazy like Pi 5.
@@JeffGeerling Same. I run my gitea server, OMV NAS, Pi Hole and Home assistant on seperate CM4's and a couple of Retro emulators. They run great but I might get a Pi 5 for a 4 player stand up cabinet I'm planning on building, with a 42 inch TV. A Pi 5 might lend it's self nicely for that project!
@@teslamax5529 I have a huge list of yet to be started projects :D Too many ideas, not enough time. But the Pi 4's were bought for them non the less! I've learnt the lesson!
I bought 4GB and 8GB Pi5s to use with the Pimoroni NVME base. I have a couple Pi4b that run 24x7 (off of Samsung bar USB sticks), but have at least 4 more sitting around unused. Need to put them to work somehow.
5:44 I second WD drives not working on the Pi. My first attempt to get my Home Assistant Yellow running on NVMe was nothing but trouble with my WD drive. I bought a Samsung and it worked first try.
The first shot of RPi's own M.2 hat at about 0:47 was so perfect! The image showed that the hat was launched today and already sold out. That's so on brand for Raspberry Pi. "We made this cool new thing! Unfortunately it's vaporware for all but our industrial clients."
i have a 10 year 8GB microSD card that has traveled with me for generations of phones, and it vaults a lot of memories. it wouldn't feel the same if it was all on the cloud...
Completely agree that NVMe M.2 is the way forward. However, anything over 2TB requires some hoops to jump through to get it to boot due to the MBR limitations in the default Raspberry Pi boot images.
Yeah; that's some thing a few of us are starting to run into when booting with more expensive/exotic NVMe storage. Even some larger SATA drives plugged in via USB!
@@LordDragon1965 if you're referencing to LTT, not following them after their controversy with Gaming Nexus. Jeff, Chris and Explaining Computers seem much more down-to-earth.
Kudos to the single-board computer makers who include an M.2 slot for an NVMe SSD and make their boards big enough to mount one. For example, the Odroid M1S.
Yes, very soon! I am working on rebuilding the merch store (with a new way better T-shirt printing company), and hope to have it going by the end of this month. The colors and printing on the shirts is sooo much better now.
Been using a Pi 3 with a 512G microSD (in a USB port) as my in-home webserver. Won't name the brand but its supposed to be a good brand. After 18 months I started detecting checksum errors (all the contents are indexed with a checksum). I look forward to getting a Pi 5 and outfitting it with an M.2 to hold that content, and be useful for other activities, such as backup/NAS activity, either from the M.2, or a USB disk drive.
There are lots of different use cases and now we have lots of SBC and minipc options so the Pi does not have to be the only solution for every case. That's what's really opening up the tiny computer world, this reminds me of when microprocessors started coming out in the 70s
I couldn't buy a Pi last time I needed one - unavailable in Australia at the time. Now they're just ridiculously expensive for their capabilities. So basically now I just use recycled desktop PCs for anything that needs a "full" OS, and ESP8266 or ESP32 for everything else.
@@tin2001 The Pi was never intended to be another desktop, if that's what you want then you want a desktop computer, whether it's a laptop, tower, or minipc.
Thanks. Agree, Pi 500 w/NVME will be sweet desktop replacement. Dual NVME Hat could support an AI solution like Coral. Hope bottleneck chip for duals is solved above 2x.
I use the bottom mount pineboard. I have the CannaKit Aluminum case. I put two screws into the hat, and two screws into the case. Added heat sync's to the small chips on the board. And I just 3d printed a tray with holes for the pins, and airflow cutouts that pressure fits the bottom of the aluminum case. It looks good
microSDs might deserve a closer look--that is, a video review of industrial microSD cards. Ignore no-name and non-industrial cards, excepting UHS-III which I don't think has industrial cards, but does have better speeds.
I have a collection of about 6 different industrial microSD drives now. I want to figure out a good test that will write through them hundreds of times and do a long-term review (like leave them all going for a month or three).
Indeed, that was my first thought as well. The really good microSD cards are really darn tiny for the capacity and should still be reasonably fast and durable. So I don't think its a clear cut as Jeff's opening makes it seem, those NVME drives are comparatively huge, consume more power, take up the PCIe lanes and that will matter for many folks using their SBC in their projects..
I would love to be able to put m.2 in my camera and phone. Just shove a 2230 into the side of my Sony alpha. I'm sure that's what you meant by "other uses" for MicroSD. I bought an industrial grade Micron 1.5TB MicroSD for my phone, and almost a year later I've had no issues despite writing 10+ TB to it. But that's expected when you pay $500 for a single MicroSD card. Regardless I'd love to see NVME become more prolific everywhere. Maybe even a standard removable enclosure to allow them to be used as internal or external storage.
I know there's also CFExpress; I tried it on a Nikon Z7 a couple years ago, and I kinda like that form factor (it actually uses PCIe!), but those drives were so expensive!
I like that microSD cards allow for removable storage on tiny devices, but I still wish that more devices would use full sized cards. Not only for performance and reliability but also because the full sized cards are easier to handle and harder to lose!
SD easier to handle, easier to insert/remove, more room to keep it cool, more room for features like caching, UHS-II/III gives even more speed... so much to like!
I really hope when the Raspberry Pi 6 comes out they just include an NVMe slot on the bottom of the board. While still keeping that PCIe connector for expansion.
MicroSD is part of the reason I went to Mini PC's over SBC's, after a couple cards getting corrupted over the years I didn't trust them for 24/7 roles and didn't have much for other uses I couldn't do with an Arduino instead.
SD card reliability is the biggest reason I've stopped using SBCs, even though it's simplicity was originally a plus (even at expense of performance). NVMe might fix the shortcoming, but by the time I factor SSD into the cost of an SBC/PC/container, I haven't had SBC come out on top in a long time.
My current setup is Raspi5 in KKSB Official Display Case to make a portable (somewhat thick) pad. Whatever hat in there, must be compatible with the official metal fan, and still fit in the case. Honestly, 300 MBps isn't bad at all. It only comes into question during large data transfer, such as video processing. It's good enough for everything else. ITMT, I have 8 GB RAM + 1 TB microSD. I can set up RAM Disk if I want faster bandwidth. That's good enough for me for now. Although that M2 setup is good for Raspi 500, for sure!
It would be very welcome; microSD cards still have a place, and I welcome any and all improvements to speed / reliability :) microSD is still great for places where it's needed-the smallest 'edge' device builds, drones, tiny cameras, etc.
Definitely a good option! I'm also thinking of trying out one of the multi-drive boards with one NVMe for boot (smaller drive), and one for storage (more capacity). It won't be blazing fast, but plenty fast for USB file copies, network file copies...
Thanks Jeff, it just keeps getting better. I do love my shitty little computers. Hope you're keeping well and your studio is keeping you amused - on the quality of the output it seems to be doing a decent job.
Not time to ditch your hard drives! :) If you just need some raw storage space, microSD still has its place, it's just not as good for a primary boot drive for an SBC these days!
I stick to extinct technology because one mans trash is another man's treasure. I found a 512 gb micro sd in a pile of discarded tech and I knew it was time for me to start getting into micro sd cards. This video confirms my assumptions. Free tech is the best tech. Nice video by the way.
Pineberry bottom with Crucial P5 plus 500gb has worked perfectly out of the box for me for over 4 months. Just in case anyone came to the comments looking for compatible options.
I don't have the official nvme hat, but I just bought an Argon40 Neo 5 NVME case and it works beautifully with a 1TB Samsung 990! Just in case anybody is wondering. I kind of figured running a Pi 5 natively on an NVME drive was going to be awesome but I am genuinely impressed with how good a solution it is.
Good point! That product description was written a couple months ago-but Raspberry Pi firmware now allows boot through the switch, so it should work now!
Gen3 shouldn't cost excessively too much. Currently on aliexpress one can find full-size PCIe cards based around the ASM2812 chip for less than 50 bucks. A Pi hat would be roughly the same design, but with the RPi's FPC connector instead of the standard card edge connector, and some solution to manage the PCIe Gen3 switch chip's higher temperature.
LOL @ those "impedance matched traces"; i might become an old geek, but maybe others remember the "IDE 40 cable" warning your bios might throw back during the time when IDE access became UDMA/66? Not using the right cable didn't allow the new higher transfer rates. The extra connections were just grounded lines between the datalines to prevent crosstalk, a true problem with IDE because the signal is sent in parallel. Amazing how much data we can send over just a couple pairs of wires these days, but it seems there are some old familiar limitations hehe.
As always what's old is new! Like my Dad does RF engineering, and a lot of the problems RF engineers deal with are similar to PCB trace issues, because it's all magnets and photons and voodoo magic with electrons, anyway :D
(~) 2:14 I had to go back and double check but I thought I heard a "B" instead of "D" for "how can we Ditch these pesky microsd cards" and was like, whoa! lol 2:18 I love the segue to your sponsor! ;) I wonder if future Pi's will come with a 2230 or similar SFF M.2 drive on the main board? Though maybe they need to get away from the "credit card-sized board" form factor and slightly increase board size. And if the main concern is fitting it into a case... well AFAIK, the cases need to be updated anyway for each raspberry pi version already! (~) 8:27 honestly, I really like your database you've got. I've used and referenced it a few times and found it really useful. It's kinda what I hope LTT Labs turns into rather than joining the blog-o-sphere (atm, I think their site is still just a blog).
I have a Geekworm X1003 PCIe to M.2 HAT and a Samsung m.2 PM991 NVMe. Size 2242 This fits on the official Pi5 cooler in the official PI5 case. The only disadvantage is that the voltage is supplied via six pins of the I/O connection. The SD card read 80 Mbits and the SSD read is over 800 Mbits with PCIe Gen 3.
you missed an important detail, which is most nvme drives have power loss protection (e.g supercap) vs sdcard which does not. I tend to yank power to my pi alot and always have to fsck the sdcard to repair the filesystem. Not so with nvme.
Heh... I can remember so many times trying to pick one up off the desk... eventually sliding it off the side of the desk into my hand (or missing my hand then doing it all over on the floor!).
Since USB boot became an option, I've used micro SD cards less. For the Pi 5, I'm only using SSDs. As Pis get new hardware features, I'm curious how the Pi Foundation and similar organizations will incorporate hardware education into their programming. It's a great time to be a Pi enthusiast.
Also, a 128gb MicroSD costs the same as a 128GB SSD (around £15), which via SATA or USB blows SD out of the water, doesn't burn out as quickly and can be booted from easily (and automatically since Pi 4B).
Try rpi-clone, and use a decent USB 3.0 adapter, it's actually nice to do that versus microSD on there. Or buy a Home Assistant Yellow (I love that board, plus internal Zigbee + Z-Wave makes it easy to integrate with everything).
@@nimoy007 Ah in that case, you have pretty much all the bits you need already. I'd just go with a USB to NVMe adapter or USB to SATA if you want to upgrade to a better/bigger/faster drive on that Pi 4. You can still use rpi-clone to clone from microSD to the USB drive (like /dev/sda).
The root filesystem suddenly going readonly with no indication to the OS until it runs out of kernel disk cache is my favorite SDCard failure mode. I still use the SDCard for the UEFI Bios for the Pi4 so it can boot more generic ARM OS''s from a USB SSD, At least this way i can use the cheapest, smallest SD Card and not worry since it's more of a write once read many affair and is pretty much inactive after boot, so no worry about wearing it out.
I think part of the reason micro SD is still used is for cost reasons and availability. While typical M.2 and NVMEs are not hard to find, they may not be as commonly found in general as micro SD cards which you can buy anywhere, but SSDs usually require you tobuy them online or from an electronics store. But that being said, some newer SBCs are starting to include NVME slots on their boards (for the smaller 2230 and 2242 sized drives) so we are heading that way,. The other thing may also be power consumtiopn as well, and on an SBC, if it's being run off of battery power for example, like a 12V power source, it may limit what can be used and a NVME drive may draw too much power as sthe entire SBC would have t obe powered off that 6V or 12V power source.
The big benefit and main reason the microSD form factor exists is the size. They are tiny, the size of a fingernail. A 2230 M.2 SSD is about the size of a "full" SD card. But SSDs are much faster. Oh, and it would help to have context in the title. Didn't knew it was about SBCs, expecting something about some sort of adapter module to get an ISSD in my phone or my camera.
The real comparison would be CFExpress which is NVMe but designed to be handled and swapped. SD and MicroSD are safe to carry in your pockets or a bag, whereas NVMe drives have a lot of exposed circuitry and aren't designed to be as physically resilliant.
Back then, I used to call my PI the "SD card eater" and put their MTBF to the test. That's the primary reason i ditched my PI2 for a Rock64 with eMMC then ditched my ARM SBC for a N100 with an nVME SSD, never going back for sure!
Hehe, sometimes the power supply can be the culprit too. I've had no issues on Pis behind UPSes with good PoE HATs or the official PSU, but I have had problems with some cheaper PSUs.
I realllllly need RPi foundation to announce their PoE hat. I still have that 1U 3D printed rack and I don’t know what my final load out needs to be. Will it fit PoE and NVMe? Do I need to redesign and 3D print the trays? The questions continue.
Yep. I've been waiting for the PI to get proper storage so I could recommend it as something for parents to buy their kids that's cheap and they can tinker with without destroying the family computer. The trick is getting it all put together without costing the same as a Mini PC running Windows which already have m.2 storage and are cheap.
Here I thought I was really killin it with a SATA and a USB3 adapter! Waiting to see if we get a cm5 and what kind of motherboards would be available for that!
Whenever Jeff says "Until next time, I'm Jeff Geerling", I wonder who he will become next time.
So far, it's always been Jeff Geerling.
So far...
you haven't yet seen the wrath of Geff Jeerling
this isn’t even his final form
Well, I think his previous form was a Jeffling. But dont quote me on that.
Thank god.
Just starting the video. My take before watching: microSD card is to the Pi, what the floppy drive was to the original IBM PC. As soon as Hard Drives were available, people mostly stopped booting off the floppies, and started using them as external storage and for transferring files between computers. If I had anything newer than a Pi3B+, I would be booting off a proper SSD instead of the microSD.
The microSDs are still useful for swapping between several different operating systems if you've only got a single pi.
RPi 3B+ can boot an SSD through a USB3-SATA adapter. It’s been a thing for some two years now.
I've said this all along and I'll continue pounding this home: Buy sdcard suitable for the job and they'll last just as long and be much cheaper. For the Raspberry Pi (or any sbc) that means only sdcards with an application rating of preferably A2, and you're golden. The performance difference to a real ssd is pretty small but if you don't need much space sdcards are much cheaper.
A2 rated sdcards are much better than most people are used to, it's very much worth a try.
The problem with people recommending all kitted out raspberry pi's is that once you reach the price of a cheap x86 based mini pc the pi just can't compete there
@@ernestgalvan9037 Has it? I thought the SoC of the rpi3 didn't allow alternate boot methods.
Eh. When I had roommates I had my Linux box still using Loadlin to boot, no MBR on the disk, so that after I booted off floppy I'd take the floppy out and put it away. This way when I shut the computer down no one else could boot it up in a misguided attempt to use it since it would stop right after the POST.
Segway to our sponsor joke WAS GOLD ♥
That segue to the sponsor was S+ tier.
It was L-tier...L for Linus
more than funny :D
@@LordDragon1965 S+ for Linus (S)ebastian ;)
I dont know how I figured segue was spelled, but that wasnt it lol
@@MichaelOfRohanTIL it is not “segway”.
"It's time to ditch microSD - for Raspberry Pi"
There, fixed the title to be less clickbaity.
*title still not updated...
It's so careless of a creator's part to say such a thing as Micro SD becomes straight up obsolete without specifying for what purpose it became obsolete.
And he even hearted your comment. Is he shameless or is it just autoheart?
@@4x13x17 shameless clickbait title, i approve because he did it somehow tastefully/shamelessly at the same time
@@4x13x17 Have you watched any of Jeff's videos before? It is definitely neither of those reasons.
Need MicroSD for sneaking out government secrets. NVMe too big.
I really like the way you referenced Explaining Computers; it shows real maturity to point people to other youtubers for related info
Jeff I liked how to mentioned Chris at Explaining Computers. Between the both of you I learned enough to get my PI4 running and enjoy all the tips and advice as well as the product reviews.
Love his videos, it's a Sunday tradition!
Next Pi should have builtin m.2 header.
This one should've.
I am shocked that RPi5 does not have boot option for nvme by default
@@Tomydiriumyou can boot from nvme easily. There’s no so card in my pi5.
@@burnte you can, but you have to edit internal pi config files (eeprom config, iirc)
I don’t agree, the price of the Pi is already getting bloated.
Size, Size & Size.
That's what she said haha!! 😂
Imagine a world where instead of 6 displays and cameras, the Pi5 had an nvme slot and didn't require active cooling.
It doesn't require active cooling. It will not harm the board to run without it, and will still outperform the pi4b iirc.
Imagine if the Pi5 went back to their $35 starting price
The Pi Zero 2 pretty much covers what the original Pi could do, a 1gb version would close the gap. The 5 is so much more than the original SBC but I think you're right, there is still a desire for low end versions.
imagine a world where Rpi made all of their own chips instead of Broadcomm's subpar SOCs
Imagine a world where I don’t need a Pi anymore.
Oh yea, 2020. I’m Pi-less now.
The troll at 2:17 got me SO GOOD! 😆🤣😆🤣😆
I flinched the way I do in an LTT video
definitely got me rushing up reaching for the mouse to skkip
@@sumimasensorrygomen SponsorBlock to the rescue!
bro i almost fell from my chair HAHAHHAHA
@@hiero. yea he said it with the same vibes of ltt
I am still angry that the raspberry pi foundation didn’t place an M.2 slot on the bottom of the pi, this flat flex solution is finicky.
Definitely finicky. I do wonder if they'll find a way to put M.2 directly on a future Pi 6.
M.2 ports consume too much power for the pi's compact power design, I've heard
@@nikobellic570so how do these M.2 hats work...don't they pull power from the PCIe interface or GPIO pins? Some may take an auxiliary power connection, but not all would.
@@nikobellic570 the port is just a connector routing PCIe to the board. If power would be the issue all the M.2 hats would not work either.
Put $10 on the price. I would pay it.
First reaction was that I found it odd when the email from Pi Hut and Pimoroni arrived this morning that the Pi Foundation had ignored the 2280 format drives in favour of the more expensive 2230 & 2242 sizes. Compact yes, but generally harder to find over the established 2280 format drives from Samsung, WD, etc.
They're a little more rare, but I think more will come to market since the size is seeing a comeback with portable gaming handhelds and SBCs.
I've already seen the launch of four new 2242 size boards, and about 8 2230, in the past two years.
@@JeffGeerling About £70-£80 in the UK currently for a 1Tb model (2230), so a slight premium. Just couldn't fathom why they left out the 2280 option initially.
Still going to order one of course!
I had the same though as you did.
I feel like an issue with raspis now is that they really want to keep compatibility between all the hats and stuff.
I wouldn't mind if they changed the form factor, broke compatibility but had a 2280 nvme slot on the bottom, perhaps another format for the gpios, normal sized hdmi ports, and all ports on one side.
Or I don't know, release a model C with all of these. Now the issue is with how cheap n100 computers are getting, compared to the price hike of the pis. Justifed Price hike for sure, but renders it less competitive.
If I need gpio stuff, I am almost always better with a pi Pico, and have it either communicate via usb with the host computer, or via WiFi or Bluetooth.
The one pi that is still in a very unique spot is the zero line. Hard to find anything else that runs Linux that well, for so cheap, low power, and with gpio.
If history serves, it will be similar to how full sized SD cards were gradually supplanted by microSD. Manufactures are already ramping up offerings for handheld gaming devices like the Steamdeck.
@@AudreyRobinel Honestly, I've kind of thought they should branch into two versions of the Pi, Keep the current standard the same (aside from going back to one large HDMI instead of two, and bring back the analog audio jack). Then they could release a Pi Pro or something of the like that's maybe twice the size or a little bit larger to accommodate the additional ports that may be needed. They kind of did the opposite with the Pi Zero, it would be nice to see them take it a little the other direction without going too far. That larger one could include more/faster PCI-E lanes with a built in M.2, one full size HDMI and one mini so you still have the option to use two displays, but aren't eating up a ton of room with the second connector while maintaining more standard connection for the first. For the Pro, I'd target $100 to $150 for the board. It's a bit more, but also more capable.
For older Pi, I’ve used AllNet Rock Pi 4 eMMC to USD Board.
USB I presume ;)
It would be great if I could find a board that would convert my old eMMC drives to US Dollars though!
@@JeffGeerlingI would be rich if I could a board like that too
@@JeffGeerling Yeah, but the eMMC conversion rate is really low right now, so I'm invested in flash cards right now :P
Also, OP, don't edit your comment, or you'll lose the context for these comments as well as Jeff's "heart."
@@JeffGeerlinghe's probably meaning eMMC to uSD
jeff, the sponsor segue troll was hilarious dude!
well... he ain't no LTT for sure...
I'm a big fan of the ArgonONE cases and accessories. The new V3 with NVMe add-on is just such a clean and professional look, and the machined aluminium-alloy direct contact case siphons off heat better than any case I've used that wasn't a tower-cooler design. Plus once it's bundled up, you can still easily access the SSD slot through a heatsink plate on the bottom. My only complaint is that it took just over a month to arrive directly from China because US supplies were unavailable.
I clicked on this video expecting Jeff to argue NVMe as a replacement for MicroSD's as a portable drive device. Sadly, that was not the case. Still a very informative video.
I mean, arguing about prices per terabyte already misses the point when it comes to Pi boot drives. Most Pis out there aren't using their system for chunky storage, and the advantage of MicroSD isn't cost-per-GB efficiency - it's just cost. You can get 5 64GB MicroSDs for $15, and for people with a ton of embedded Pis and Pi Zeros around the place, that's a strong value proposition.
Obviously if you're using your Pi for performance sensitive and storage sensitive work, yeah a MicroSD isn't going to cut it. But if you just want a boot drive to run a daemon or two from RAM, NVMe requires more hardware, more expensive drives, for performance you won't use.
6:43 - there is a low lane count asmedia PCIe gen 3 switch - the ASM2806A. It's the same switch used in the Asus FLASHTOR 6&12 m.2 disk NAS units, along with a number of multi-controller USB and SATA cards.
They do use quite a bit more power than gen 2 switches. Most implementations I've seen require heatsinks. I also imagine they cost quite a bit more.
I can't beleive I'm yet to buy a raspberry pi 5 - got a ton of CM4's and 4b's.... I need an excuse to buy one and not be wasteful!!
Haha well good on you for not contributing to ewaste by buying something you don't have a need for!
CM4 is still a great little machine. And I run a couple 4B's where I need a little speed but not something crazy like Pi 5.
Me too. But I have 4x CM4, 2x Pi 4, and way too much of other things. 😅
@@JeffGeerling Same. I run my gitea server, OMV NAS, Pi Hole and Home assistant on seperate CM4's and a couple of Retro emulators. They run great but I might get a Pi 5 for a 4 player stand up cabinet I'm planning on building, with a 42 inch TV. A Pi 5 might lend it's self nicely for that project!
@@teslamax5529 I have a huge list of yet to be started projects :D Too many ideas, not enough time. But the Pi 4's were bought for them non the less! I've learnt the lesson!
I bought 4GB and 8GB Pi5s to use with the Pimoroni NVME base.
I have a couple Pi4b that run 24x7 (off of Samsung bar USB sticks), but have at least 4 more sitting around unused.
Need to put them to work somehow.
Perfect timing! We were starting to research this for Pi5 Home Assistant 😍
5:44 I second WD drives not working on the Pi. My first attempt to get my Home Assistant Yellow running on NVMe was nothing but trouble with my WD drive. I bought a Samsung and it worked first try.
Love the energy in your videos. Thank you for your content.
The first shot of RPi's own M.2 hat at about 0:47 was so perfect! The image showed that the hat was launched today and already sold out. That's so on brand for Raspberry Pi. "We made this cool new thing! Unfortunately it's vaporware for all but our industrial clients."
i have a 10 year 8GB microSD card that has traveled with me for generations of phones, and it vaults a lot of memories. it wouldn't feel the same if it was all on the cloud...
2:17 That LINUS style sponsor segway was....!!😂🤣
Completely agree that NVMe M.2 is the way forward. However, anything over 2TB requires some hoops to jump through to get it to boot due to the MBR limitations in the default Raspberry Pi boot images.
Yeah; that's some thing a few of us are starting to run into when booting with more expensive/exotic NVMe storage. Even some larger SATA drives plugged in via USB!
YAAY! Explaining Computer mentioned
References to two of my non-Jeff favorites. Chris and Linus.
@@LordDragon1965 if you're referencing to LTT, not following them after their controversy with Gaming Nexus. Jeff, Chris and Explaining Computers seem much more down-to-earth.
Kudos to the single-board computer makers who include an M.2 slot for an NVMe SSD and make their boards big enough to mount one. For example, the Odroid M1S.
Will the shirt you're wearing be available in that colour on the merch store? :( I really like that orangey gradient, thanks!
Yes, very soon! I am working on rebuilding the merch store (with a new way better T-shirt printing company), and hope to have it going by the end of this month.
The colors and printing on the shirts is sooo much better now.
Been using a Pi 3 with a 512G microSD (in a USB port) as my in-home webserver. Won't name the brand but its supposed to be a good brand. After 18 months I started detecting checksum errors (all the contents are indexed with a checksum). I look forward to getting a Pi 5 and outfitting it with an M.2 to hold that content, and be useful for other activities, such as backup/NAS activity, either from the M.2, or a USB disk drive.
Apparently I live in a weird world where non-raspberry accessories and SBCs have much better availability and affordability.
There are lots of different use cases and now we have lots of SBC and minipc options so the Pi does not have to be the only solution for every case. That's what's really opening up the tiny computer world, this reminds me of when microprocessors started coming out in the 70s
The only reason I'm planning on buying a R Pi 5 is the composite video output for a crt build. After that, who knows? Maybe it's time to say goodbye.
I couldn't buy a Pi last time I needed one - unavailable in Australia at the time. Now they're just ridiculously expensive for their capabilities.
So basically now I just use recycled desktop PCs for anything that needs a "full" OS, and ESP8266 or ESP32 for everything else.
@@tin2001 The Pi 5 is $5 more for the same RAM as the Pi4. That doesn't seem a particularly large price hike for 2.5x the performance.
@@tin2001 The Pi was never intended to be another desktop, if that's what you want then you want a desktop computer, whether it's a laptop, tower, or minipc.
Love your work Jeff, and your t-shirt!!
Thanks. Agree, Pi 500 w/NVME will be sweet desktop replacement. Dual NVME Hat could support an AI solution like Coral. Hope bottleneck chip for duals is solved above 2x.
I use the bottom mount pineboard. I have the CannaKit Aluminum case. I put two screws into the hat, and two screws into the case. Added heat sync's to the small chips on the board. And I just 3d printed a tray with holes for the pins, and airflow cutouts that pressure fits the bottom of the aluminum case. It looks good
microSDs might deserve a closer look--that is, a video review of industrial microSD cards. Ignore no-name and non-industrial cards, excepting UHS-III which I don't think has industrial cards, but does have better speeds.
I have a collection of about 6 different industrial microSD drives now. I want to figure out a good test that will write through them hundreds of times and do a long-term review (like leave them all going for a month or three).
Indeed, that was my first thought as well. The really good microSD cards are really darn tiny for the capacity and should still be reasonably fast and durable. So I don't think its a clear cut as Jeff's opening makes it seem, those NVME drives are comparatively huge, consume more power, take up the PCIe lanes and that will matter for many folks using their SBC in their projects..
@@JeffGeerling I've got a hunch that unexpected power disconnect during writes is the real test
I would love to be able to put m.2 in my camera and phone. Just shove a 2230 into the side of my Sony alpha. I'm sure that's what you meant by "other uses" for MicroSD. I bought an industrial grade Micron 1.5TB MicroSD for my phone, and almost a year later I've had no issues despite writing 10+ TB to it. But that's expected when you pay $500 for a single MicroSD card. Regardless I'd love to see NVME become more prolific everywhere. Maybe even a standard removable enclosure to allow them to be used as internal or external storage.
I know there's also CFExpress; I tried it on a Nikon Z7 a couple years ago, and I kinda like that form factor (it actually uses PCIe!), but those drives were so expensive!
I like that microSD cards allow for removable storage on tiny devices, but I still wish that more devices would use full sized cards. Not only for performance and reliability but also because the full sized cards are easier to handle and harder to lose!
SD easier to handle, easier to insert/remove, more room to keep it cool, more room for features like caching, UHS-II/III gives even more speed... so much to like!
I really hope when the Raspberry Pi 6 comes out they just include an NVMe slot on the bottom of the board. While still keeping that PCIe connector for expansion.
Yeah stop using SD cards to run an OS, they aren't meant tor that
eMMC has entered the chat
To be fair, SD cards were the only supported option on rpi for quite a while.
MicroSD is part of the reason I went to Mini PC's over SBC's, after a couple cards getting corrupted over the years I didn't trust them for 24/7 roles and didn't have much for other uses I couldn't do with an Arduino instead.
SD card reliability is the biggest reason I've stopped using SBCs, even though it's simplicity was originally a plus (even at expense of performance). NVMe might fix the shortcoming, but by the time I factor SSD into the cost of an SBC/PC/container, I haven't had SBC come out on top in a long time.
Depends on the use case but mini PCs have come a long way for the money!
My current setup is Raspi5 in KKSB Official Display Case to make a portable (somewhat thick) pad. Whatever hat in there, must be compatible with the official metal fan, and still fit in the case.
Honestly, 300 MBps isn't bad at all. It only comes into question during large data transfer, such as video processing. It's good enough for everything else.
ITMT, I have 8 GB RAM + 1 TB microSD. I can set up RAM Disk if I want faster bandwidth. That's good enough for me for now.
Although that M2 setup is good for Raspi 500, for sure!
I almost mistook this video for an LTT video
No need to be so rude.
Same here. "A segue to our sponsor..." Not really, but it was a funny jab at LTT!😂
Nah. The name and thumbnail weren't clickbait enough
Your closing note is what I have been hoping ever since the Pi 5 was released :)
I haven't got a chance to watch the full video, but what's your thought on sd express, if it ever becomes a viable product?
It would be very welcome; microSD cards still have a place, and I welcome any and all improvements to speed / reliability :)
microSD is still great for places where it's needed-the smallest 'edge' device builds, drones, tiny cameras, etc.
If they don’t go to Express, they could at least fit an SD slot that did uhs 2, preferably 3.
Nice vid Jeff. I have been using the Pimoroni NVMe base. It works well. Like you mentioned, getting a case is problematic.
What if manufacturers make ssd slots like SD card slots with the spring thing and the easy access.
I thought the same thing watching this!
RPi5 case with NVMe adapter on bottom.
Geekworm Metal Case P580
Geekworm Bottom NVMe x1002
sd card for the "boot drive", nvme for work storage. That's the config I'm going with.
Definitely a good option! I'm also thinking of trying out one of the multi-drive boards with one NVMe for boot (smaller drive), and one for storage (more capacity). It won't be blazing fast, but plenty fast for USB file copies, network file copies...
We have large servers that do the initial boot off an SD but that then does the OS boot off a "real" disk
Thanks Jeff, it just keeps getting better. I do love my shitty little computers. Hope you're keeping well and your studio is keeping you amused - on the quality of the output it seems to be doing a decent job.
0:05 TWENTY? I had no idea there'd be so many already!
I used a Pimironi Base with official case, had to dremil a gap for the ribbon cable to attach drive under the case and job done, works fine as.
i still nab micro sd's as 20 bucks for a 256 is good price. yet i will also still use hdd for game storage as cheep space while failing isn't bad.
Not time to ditch your hard drives! :)
If you just need some raw storage space, microSD still has its place, it's just not as good for a primary boot drive for an SBC these days!
Thank You for the informative video, as always. Now I must figure out what to do with my 30 or so Micro SD cards....
SBC doesn't fit into my camera...
I stick to extinct technology because one mans trash is another man's treasure. I found a 512 gb micro sd in a pile of discarded tech and I knew it was time for me to start getting into micro sd cards. This video confirms my assumptions. Free tech is the best tech. Nice video by the way.
Classy hat-tip to Linus, but the lack of a segue is nice. Enjoy your videos, and your Engineering channel is great!
My fingers were jumping to the keyboard to skip the sponsor. ??
Watching the changes in NVME and Pi boards reminds me of the journey from 8088, 286, 386, 486 based PCs.
I wish the Intel Optane M10 16GB NVME SSD's were compatible with RPi. Only a few bucks each and they would be perfect for so many of my applications.
Don't need much space, but want wicked-fast IOPS? Yes :D
@@JeffGeerling slight problem as intel seems to have killed the whole optane project, so not going to happen unfortunatly
4:38 "... a good SSD and power supply ..." are better than "... a cheap micro SD card or a phone power supply." thank you sherlock ❤
don't you get tired of being so productive?
'Until next time, I'm Jeff Geerling.' 🤔 Who will you be, next time? 😉 Thanks for the video.
Nice Segue !
...To the comments!
@@JeffGeerling
Great video! Thinking of creating a travel router and a simple small raid drive for storage. I like to tinker.
yeah lets use macroSD
Pineberry bottom with Crucial P5 plus 500gb has worked perfectly out of the box for me for over 4 months. Just in case anyone came to the comments looking for compatible options.
Yeah, they just work.....except with some WD SSDs.......
2:55 The heck are you doin there Jeff ;-;
haha just a little redneck debugging, using the antistatic bag as an insulator
Only 5.25 floppy's for me the hole in the middle is convenient too.
Yet jus' a recidivist reprobate ya no.....
You can put your finger through it and spin the floppy like a fidget spinner, multi-purpose
@@LuluTheCorgi EXACTLY 💯 Thank God some one else understands! Ps have a great week!
"It's a good time to get rid of your MicroSD card."
Me staring at my Nintendo Switch: "The Council has spoken.... I'm sorry."
Haha, time for a Steam Deck!
Omg… best crossover I’ve seen in a while among TH-camrs! 😂😂
I don't have the official nvme hat, but I just bought an Argon40 Neo 5 NVME case and it works beautifully with a 1TB Samsung 990! Just in case anybody is wondering. I kind of figured running a Pi 5 natively on an NVME drive was going to be awesome but I am genuinely impressed with how good a solution it is.
Nice seeing you referencing Chris!
Pimoroni NVMe *dual* slot option says it won't boot due to PCIe switch on there. Would be good to have a solution as you talked about :)
Good point! That product description was written a couple months ago-but Raspberry Pi firmware now allows boot through the switch, so it should work now!
@@JeffGeerling Awesome. I have a couple of Pi5s built to test so will check out :)
Gen3 shouldn't cost excessively too much. Currently on aliexpress one can find full-size PCIe cards based around the ASM2812 chip for less than 50 bucks. A Pi hat would be roughly the same design, but with the RPi's FPC connector instead of the standard card edge connector, and some solution to manage the PCIe Gen3 switch chip's higher temperature.
Hopefully a few cheap switch chips will roll out on the market soon! I've heard good things about a couple ASMedia chips that do Gen 3.
I Don't remember hearing about level 2 Jeff before. Now subbed 😊
LOL @ those "impedance matched traces"; i might become an old geek, but maybe others remember the "IDE 40 cable" warning your bios might throw back during the time when IDE access became UDMA/66?
Not using the right cable didn't allow the new higher transfer rates. The extra connections were just grounded lines between the datalines to prevent crosstalk, a true problem with IDE because the signal is sent in parallel. Amazing how much data we can send over just a couple pairs of wires these days, but it seems there are some old familiar limitations hehe.
As always what's old is new!
Like my Dad does RF engineering, and a lot of the problems RF engineers deal with are similar to PCB trace issues, because it's all magnets and photons and voodoo magic with electrons, anyway :D
(~) 2:14 I had to go back and double check but I thought I heard a "B" instead of "D" for "how can we Ditch these pesky microsd cards" and was like, whoa! lol
2:18 I love the segue to your sponsor! ;)
I wonder if future Pi's will come with a 2230 or similar SFF M.2 drive on the main board? Though maybe they need to get away from the "credit card-sized board" form factor and slightly increase board size. And if the main concern is fitting it into a case... well AFAIK, the cases need to be updated anyway for each raspberry pi version already!
(~) 8:27 honestly, I really like your database you've got. I've used and referenced it a few times and found it really useful. It's kinda what I hope LTT Labs turns into rather than joining the blog-o-sphere (atm, I think their site is still just a blog).
2:55 that´s the board what im missing a HATBrick Comander with an NVME slot on it!
I have a Geekworm X1003 PCIe to M.2 HAT and a Samsung m.2 PM991 NVMe. Size 2242
This fits on the official Pi5 cooler in the official PI5 case.
The only disadvantage is that the voltage is supplied via six pins of the I/O connection.
The SD card read 80 Mbits and the SSD read is over 800 Mbits with PCIe Gen 3.
I was able to keep using the case fan with an NVME hat by leaving it loose between the hat and the board. temps are still good lol.
Heh, if it works it works!
@@JeffGeerling Now that's a mantra for success!
you missed an important detail, which is most nvme drives have power loss protection (e.g supercap) vs sdcard which does not. I tend to yank power to my pi alot and always have to fsck the sdcard to repair the filesystem. Not so with nvme.
I really don't like formats that are considerably smaller than the tool you pick them up with, your hand.
Heh... I can remember so many times trying to pick one up off the desk... eventually sliding it off the side of the desk into my hand (or missing my hand then doing it all over on the floor!).
Do you have comically large screws and fasteners?
Since USB boot became an option, I've used micro SD cards less. For the Pi 5, I'm only using SSDs. As Pis get new hardware features, I'm curious how the Pi Foundation and similar organizations will incorporate hardware education into their programming. It's a great time to be a Pi enthusiast.
Also, a 128gb MicroSD costs the same as a 128GB SSD (around £15), which via SATA or USB blows SD out of the water, doesn't burn out as quickly and can be booted from easily (and automatically since Pi 4B).
I'm hoping for an RP5 updated version of the Argon EON. I do like the triangular shape of it.
I switched to Orange Pi 5 for my display machines, before the RPi5 was released, and I'm fond of them. Takes NVMe drives without needing a hat.
Guess I'll have to look into moving my Home Assistant OS over to NVMe on my Pi 4. Any advice?
Try rpi-clone, and use a decent USB 3.0 adapter, it's actually nice to do that versus microSD on there. Or buy a Home Assistant Yellow (I love that board, plus internal Zigbee + Z-Wave makes it easy to integrate with everything).
@@JeffGeerling I would go Yellow, but I already have Zigbee and Z-wave sticks.
@@nimoy007 Ah in that case, you have pretty much all the bits you need already. I'd just go with a USB to NVMe adapter or USB to SATA if you want to upgrade to a better/bigger/faster drive on that Pi 4. You can still use rpi-clone to clone from microSD to the USB drive (like /dev/sda).
Was srsly reaching for the mouse at that segue to our...
Well played sir, very well played.
I recently got a McUzone MPS2280 POE Nvme board with a Samsung 990EVO memory board. Liking it!
The root filesystem suddenly going readonly with no indication to the OS until it runs out of kernel disk cache is my favorite SDCard failure mode. I still use the SDCard for the UEFI Bios for the Pi4 so it can boot more generic ARM OS''s from a USB SSD, At least this way i can use the cheapest, smallest SD Card and not worry since it's more of a write once read many affair and is pretty much inactive after boot, so no worry about wearing it out.
Yeah failure modes for microSD are no fun :(
I think part of the reason micro SD is still used is for cost reasons and availability. While typical M.2 and NVMEs are not hard to find, they may not be as commonly found in general as micro SD cards which you can buy anywhere, but SSDs usually require you tobuy them online or from an electronics store. But that being said, some newer SBCs are starting to include NVME slots on their boards (for the smaller 2230 and 2242 sized drives) so we are heading that way,. The other thing may also be power consumtiopn as well, and on an SBC, if it's being run off of battery power for example, like a 12V power source, it may limit what can be used and a NVME drive may draw too much power as sthe entire SBC would have t obe powered off that 6V or 12V power source.
The big benefit and main reason the microSD form factor exists is the size. They are tiny, the size of a fingernail. A 2230 M.2 SSD is about the size of a "full" SD card.
But SSDs are much faster.
Oh, and it would help to have context in the title. Didn't knew it was about SBCs, expecting something about some sort of adapter module to get an ISSD in my phone or my camera.
The real comparison would be CFExpress which is NVMe but designed to be handled and swapped. SD and MicroSD are safe to carry in your pockets or a bag, whereas NVMe drives have a lot of exposed circuitry and aren't designed to be as physically resilliant.
You trolling us about a Segway to a non existent sponsor made me LOL 😂
Back then, I used to call my PI the "SD card eater" and put their MTBF to the test.
That's the primary reason i ditched my PI2 for a Rock64 with eMMC then ditched my ARM SBC for a N100 with an nVME SSD, never going back for sure!
Hehe, sometimes the power supply can be the culprit too. I've had no issues on Pis behind UPSes with good PoE HATs or the official PSU, but I have had problems with some cheaper PSUs.
@@JeffGeerling True, had official PSU too but i believe in my case it was the intensive I/Os on them 😅
@@JeffGeerlingdo the pis not have power smoothing? That seems ridi
I realllllly need RPi foundation to announce their PoE hat. I still have that 1U 3D printed rack and I don’t know what my final load out needs to be. Will it fit PoE and NVMe? Do I need to redesign and 3D print the trays? The questions continue.
Yes, want to see their solution!
Yep. I've been waiting for the PI to get proper storage so I could recommend it as something for parents to buy their kids that's cheap and they can tinker with without destroying the family computer. The trick is getting it all put together without costing the same as a Mini PC running Windows which already have m.2 storage and are cheap.
Thanks for explaining all this Jeff. Much appreciated.
Here I thought I was really killin it with a SATA and a USB3 adapter!
Waiting to see if we get a cm5 and what kind of motherboards would be available for that!
The transflash were never intended for speed or multiple rewrites. They won't last long when used as a boot drive.