>
> *One Drive gives free storage, Google Drive offers free storage.  Its just
> a matter of staying within the free limits.  If the OP was not wanting
> electronic transfer, he already has the SD card made and could have dropped
> it in the mail instead of asking how to make an image file from the SD
> card!*
>

Still needs a copy . . .

On Tue, Apr 12, 2016 at 9:25 PM, Wally Bkg <[email protected]> wrote:

> One Drive gives free storage, Google Drive offers free storage.  Its just
> a matter of staying within the free limits.  If the OP was not wanting
> electronic transfer, he already has the SD card made and could have dropped
> it in the mail instead of asking how to make an image file from the SD card!
>
>
> On Tuesday, April 12, 2016 at 9:06:20 PM UTC-5, William Hermans wrote:
>>
>> Wally, dude, what are you talking about ?
>>
>> You put the sdcard into a plastic case, drop the whole thing into an
>> overnight UPS folder, and be done with it. $10 versus spending a monthly
>> fee for something you probably don't use all that often.
>>
>> On Tue, Apr 12, 2016 at 5:50 PM, Wally Bkg <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> The downside of this is your 4GB Emmc image will be a 4GB file.  If you
>>> have a "real" web or ftp server its not much of a a problem, but if you
>>> don't it can be a hassle, although I've had good results with large fie
>>> transfers using Microsoft's "free" One Drive service, although I'd signed
>>> up for it long enough ago that I got 15GB storage, new accounts get less.
>>> Robert's 4GB images with xzcat usually come in under a GB and the
>>> 2016-04-03 images expands to about 3GB when expanded and written to an SD
>>> card.
>>>
>>> If your remote is a Windows host, life is more complicated, in any case.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Tuesday, April 12, 2016 at 5:20:15 PM UTC-5, William Hermans wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Unless you're already familiar with bmaptool, dd is probably the best,
>>>> and easiest method to back up the whole sdcard byte for byte. simply place
>>>> the sdcard in any Linux system that is not running off the sdcard live, and
>>>> run
>>>>
>>>> # dd if=/path/to/sdcard of=/path/to/save_file.ext
>>>>
>>>> Technically the file it's saved as does not even need an extension, but
>>>> it makes it clearer as to what the file is. Also, the Linux system used to
>>>> make the backup can be made from the beaglebone too, but it can not be
>>>> running live off the sdcard at the time. Additionally "#" indicates this
>>>> must be run as root, but does not necessarily mean you have to be logged in
>>>> as root. You can also use sudo . . .
>>>>
>>>> On Tue, Apr 12, 2016 at 1:18 PM, Wally Bkg <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> I think bmaptools will be the most efficient way in terms of the file
>>>>> you distribute.  But I'm not sure if the bmaptools are available for
>>>>> Windows systems
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> https://source.tizen.org/documentation/reference/bmaptool/usage/bmaptool-create
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Otherwise you can dd the SD card to xzcat to produce a compressed
>>>>> image file like Robert distributes testing images on elinux.org
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Tuesday, April 12, 2016 at 3:05:37 PM UTC-5, [email protected]
>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Good afternoon!
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I have successfully created a bootablr microSD by using the following:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> /opt/scripts/tools/eMMC/beaglebone-black-make-microSD-flasher-from-eMMC.sh
>>>>>> to write an image from the on-board eMMC to a microSD card
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Now I need to send the image to our colleagues in Houston, and I want
>>>>>> to create an single image file from the newly created bootable microSD
>>>>>> card, how can I do this?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Best regards,
>>>>>> Kevin
>>>>>>
>>>>>> --
>>>>> For more options, visit http://beagleboard.org/discuss
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>>>>>
>>>>
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>>
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