Consider a hard drive if you expect a non-trivial disk I/O load - SD cards do wear out.
On 06-Dec-17 21:08, khandy21yo wrote: > If you're just starting off with a pi, it might be easiest to buy a > kit, which includes all the necessary parts to get started, including > power supply, case, heat sinks, HDMI cable, and a SIM card preloaded > with an os. Available on Amazon, and many others. > > Get a 32 or larger card if you want to set up a lot of drives. And the > pi3 is powerful enough for a lot of other games and stuff. Full Linux > environment available, including compi,are, web browsers,, ...Fun toy. > > If you don't have hdmi display available, get a HDMI to vga > converter. Also a usb keyboard and mouse. > > > > Sent from my Galaxy TabĀ® A > > -------- Original message -------- > From: Shaun McCloud <shaun.thomas.mccl...@gmail.com> > Date: 12/6/17 5:33 PM (GMT-07:00) > To: simh@trailing-edge.com > Subject: [Simh] MicroSD Card for SimH on Raspberry Pi 3 > > Hello, > > I have just gotten into SimH and am planning on getting a Raspberry Pi > 3 for my SimH usage, just to not use up a lot of space on my laptop. > What is a good MicroSD card for the Pi 3 and SimH? Or does it not > really matter as long as it works fine in the Pi 3 on its own and has > capacity for what I want to do? > > Shaun McCloud, MCDST > > > _______________________________________________ > Simh mailing list > Simh@trailing-edge.com > http://mailman.trailing-edge.com/mailman/listinfo/simh
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