I have to break these things down so I can get them into my neanderthal head, 
so my apologies if this is obvious to everyone already. Is this a reasonable 
summary of the storage options for EOMA68?

I looked at some old photos and the EOMA-68 page, and I reckon these are the 
data storage options. By data storage I mean memory, disk space, or - to talk 
oldskool - any input/output device.


EOMA68 data storage options
---
1. micro-SD card
2. USB flash drive (AKA USB stick, pen drive, external NAND)
3. internal NAND
4. mechanical hard disk
5. Solid State Disk


file transfer speeds
--
1 is the slowest, 5 is the fastest.

If you want to run something that thrashes the storage, like an e-mail server, 
stick the files on a disk.


data storage capacity
--
1 is the smallest, and 5 the biggest.

Using a micro-SD card is roughly the same as using as a small cloud server - 
enough space to store the OS, a bunch of applications, and have some left over.

If you want to run something that chomps through storage, like a database 
server, stick the files on a disk.


sockets for attaching another mass storage device
--
USB2
There's a micro-USB socket on one side of the board, and another USB interface 
via the PCMCIA socket (or whatever you call the big pin connector housing).
If you want to connect your Edison Cylinder Phonograph to your EOMA68 card, USB 
it up first.

SD/MMC
beside the USB socket

SATA III
via the PCMCIA socket



I just realized I’ve been dropping the hyphen from EOMA-68. Oops.



links
--
old photos
http://rhombus-tech.net/allwinner_a10/news/
EOMA-68 page
http://elinux.org/Embedded_Open_Modular_Architecture/EOMA-68

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