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Grsync raspberry pi
Grsync raspberry pi











grsync raspberry pi

I wasn’t, I was merely looking for an upgraded product and ask what the odds were of getting one. His response was condescending, negative, and assumed that I was challenging what they knew about the market. Not having a membership on this board does not mean that I did not have these from the beginning.

grsync raspberry pi

Being familiar with the Pi the most I thought I would ask the question, nothing nefarious about it. I saw another SBC delivering on all but the M.2. Expect this thread to get locked, and you may be given a break to think about what not to do in this regard. I'm sure it will be interesting, and quite likely exciting.whether or not any new features are things I wind up using.Īnd as a final small bit of advice for the OP.trying to start up locked threads does not sit well with the moderators. In spite of my expression that you won't get what you asking for on the Pi5B (which I would expect to be quite set in stone by now), I am eagerly looking forward to see what *is* on it.

grsync raspberry pi

After all, The first 3 generations of Pis, covering the first 7 years, stuck with, not only USB 2.0, but sharing the USB 2 interface with the Ethernet connection. Not something I'd bet on for a Pi5B, but I wouldn't bet against it by the time we get to the Pi7B. If you really want a fast MSD, you need to wait until a Pi comes along with one of the faster variants of USB 3 *and* a faster interface between the SoC and hub chip. Won't be any faster than a USB3 port, but you'll one less protocol conversion each way, so the throughput should improve.slightly. Use a CM4 and CMIO4 carrier and you have the exposed PCIe port. On the other hand, if you want a direct PCIe to drive connection, that, too, can be done.

grsync raspberry pi

SATA III is faster than USB 3 so paying for the extra speed of NVME is just flushing money down the drain. Mind you, there isn't a great deal of point to that particular choice of boot device. There are people who have done just that. You just need to configure the Pi to boot from a USB mass storage device (MSD) and connect your choice of drive through a suitable adapter-and in the given case, mostly likely its own PSU-and away you go. Regarding booting from an M.2 (presumably NVME) SSD. On the odds, by the time that happens, some people will be disappointed because they want 32GB or 64GB. All of that said, some Pi at some point in the future will probably have 16GB. It will depend on what type of DRAM is used, what packages that will fit on the board are available, and what it would cost to market the board. Certainly not outside the realm of possibility. Same here (with respect to wanting to have made a response).Īs for 16GB RAM on the Pi5B. Sorry your first post got locked so quickly. While I don’t have a specific example, concerns have been expressed that speculation by customers could be picked up by web crawlers since this is a vendor-run forum and somehow confused as an official product roadmap. Note also that the Pi 3B, 3B+ and 4B models can already boot from an SSD. Welcome to the forum! I’d give the person who locked your post the benefit of the doubt on the account of this recent post.įrom what I understand, the SOC in the Pi 4B has the physical ability to address 16GB RAM. The disadvantage of this forum is that you interact directly with engineers rather than customer service. The advantage of this forum is that you interact directly with engineers rather than customer service. I saw your post, wanted to say something, but it got locked. I guess in the future maybe this isn’t the brand for me. So, I’ve had Raspberry Pi boards since they launched their first SBC… I had no idea that asking a simple question about future hardware would be met with such poor customer service.













Grsync raspberry pi