• @[email protected]
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    511 hours ago

    The only problem I’ve had with Raspberry Pi is that some apps want to write a lot of stuff to “disk”, and the default “disk” on a Pi is a MicroSD card which dies if you keep writing things to it. Sure, you can always plug something into a USB slot, but that adds a bit of friction to the whole process.

    Oh, also, I wish it were easy to power a whole bunch of Pi units. Each one needing its own wall wart is a bit annoying, and I’ve had iffy results using weaker, less steady power supplies with multiple ports intended for things like phones.

    • @QuarterSwede
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      32 hours ago

      I ended up just buying an industrial mSD card. Has yet to fail.

    • @[email protected]
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      25 hours ago

      Most SD cards aren’t really suitable for the kind of workload an operating system generates (that being mostly random i/o). Make sure to get a reputable A2 (application class 2) rated card, they aren’t that expensive but perform way better.

      Raspberry Pi themselves launched a card recently, I haven’t tried that one but it’s probably a good choice too.

    • SpongeBorgCubePants
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      47 hours ago

      I really recommend a HAT with SSD, totally worth the investment.

      • @Tangent5280
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        27 hours ago

        Wouldn’t an SSD run into problems down the line with too many Writes?

        • @Couldbealeotard
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          6 hours ago

          Theoretically, yes, but I suspect the manufacturing quality of SD cards is a lot lower than SSDs