Quote:
Originally Posted by Semwize
I want to put 64 GB or 128 GB on Libra 2, I choose a card))
I would like to see the results of the Raspberry Pi SD card. It's difficult for me to order it, but if everything is absolutely wonderful there, then why not.
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The Raspberry Pi SD cards as near as I can tell are high endurance cards. Linux is absolutely enthused with reading/writing small blocks of data so the high endurance makes sense. I understand that the Raspberry Pi branded µSD cards are manufactured by Longsys (also using the Lexar brand name) tested for compatibility, etc. but going by the specifications, any decent brand name A2 µSD card with CQ support will work. The high endurance cards will simply work longer.
Took a while to dig this link out of my collection mentioning SanDisk & Raspberry Pi but found this item:
Raspberry Pi SD Cards and the Raspberry Pi Bumper: your new favourite accessories
One issue with putting a larger µSD card in a Kobo ereader is that when you start getting larger numbers of books on the ereader, the database size increases and can easily exceed the RAM size which does slow down some functions such as searching (I noticed this when I had >12,000 ePubs on my Clara HD).