Raspberry Pi now sells its own branded microSD cards
Date:
Tue, 08 Oct 2024 16:03:00 +0000
Description:
The Raspberry Pi Foundation hopes a partnership with OEM card vendor Longsys will increase performance on its computers by allowing SD cards to see into the future.
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Raspberry Pi owners of all stripes can now purchase branded SD cards
optimised for the Pi ecosystem directly from sanctioned resellers, with additional performance enhancements promised for the Pi 5 specifically.
The Raspberry Pi Foundation announced the company has teamed up with OEM card vendor Longsys to ensure the new cards offer exceptional random read and
write throughput on any and all Pi computers, while support for command queuing (CQ) on the Raspberry PI 5 will push them even further.
Unlocking this additional functionality in the Pi 5s host controller requires an update to the latest release of Raspberry Pi OS; which does of course mean that users running other Linux distributions are out of luck for the foreseeable future. Command queuing
CQ-compatible cards can, with the right hardware, take read/write commands in any order from the read/write queue.
The release of the Pi 5 did not initially feature support in its host controller for CQ, which supersedes the legacy SD Host Controller Interface (SDHCI) interface when a compatible card is detected, because of it only previously being available on eMMC devices until a Pi developer decided in 2024 to work on adding the support to Pi OS directly.
While this is good news, the Pi Foundation admit that its not quite the speed revolution you might be expecting: command queuing lets the flash controller hide more of the latency associated with accessing disparate NAND flash
pages, it says, noting that cards are capable of better throughput in theory. Pi SD cards
Still, its a new product to sell, and the Pi foundation reports that
retailers have been instructed to only promote its own cards as well as include them in bundles. At resellers, that appear to be free to price the products with some degree of wiggle room, the new SD cards have been priced around $10/10 for 32GB and $20/20 for 64GB.
Other cards may be cheaper, but one that truly adheres to the A2 specification, and allows for command queuing on true A2 cards in Pi 5 computers, may be a worthwhile purchase for those new to the Pi microcomputer or enthusiasts looking to quickly get up and running.
Meanwhile, a brand new, snap-on, durable case made of silicon, the Raspberry Pi Bumper, is now available for the Pi 5. It protects both the Pi and the surface youre putting it down on, and is just $3. The case will also fit the Active Cooler heatsink-and-fan combo for the Pi. More from TechRadar Pro The best Raspberry Pi distros right now: tested and reviewed by us Linux systems are being hit by a wide-ranging and dangerous new malware Watch out Windows Linux market share could hit a major milestone soon
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Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/pro/raspberry-pi-now-sells-its-own-branded-microsd-c ards
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