08-14-2017, 02:51 PM
(This post was last modified: 08-19-2017, 06:50 PM by MarkHaysHarris777.)
OK, my question comes from being very ignorant of Linux and the limits of the Pinebook. My expectation is to use the machine mostly to do writing via Google's Sheets and Docs. Given the availability of largish SD micros and USB sticks, why would I want to upgrade from the 16 to 64 GB eMMC? Would it be like buying a Jeep to drive to work on the freeway and dream of driving over the cars in front of me when traffic stops, but never try?
Lots of people buy very expensive, tricked out SUVs, but never venture off the asphalt. Or in the extreme, drive over stalled traffic ala monster trucks.
At any rate, the answer so far is the speed of the memory on board versus external that comes into play. What am I likely to burn into eMMC memory, beyond what is there by default, that needs the additional speed? Does the underlying hardware make use of virtual memory?
Pine64.org only lists up to 64GB. Even though larger eMMC chips are produced, could the Pinebook utilize such if it were built? And if so, has Pine64 shown any interest in such?
I suspect you are right about the Pinebook supporting that size as the modules appear to have a common bus/footprint. Amazon lists a 128GB eMMC module that looks exactly like the 16GB part at $100 delivered. But upgrading to that and you have a $200 machine, which takes you close in cost to an HP notebook with much larger RAM, HD/SSD, tec,. and Win10. Still, for my original use objectives, the 16GB Pinebook is a nice solution.
the 16GB will be fine for Ubuntu + Google Docs, in my humble view. I didn't go above 10gb used on my 64gb module until I started syncing a bunch of files to local storage. you also have to install the 64gb module yourself.