![]() But if it was a Micro-/Mini-SD or M2 card that you can take out, consider getting a cheap external card reader as it's more practical (and much faster). ![]() ![]() But since you mentioned in an earlier post that "the memory cards stuck in the phone & copying via the phones USB connection isnt very fast," I was under the impression that it's one of those built-in types of flash memory chips soldered onto the phone's board. I know memory cards are relatively cheap and easily replaceable nowadays. In an SDC install, however, write states occur in RAM (unless you enable persistence, of course), so less write stress to the memory card. Imagine how soon that failure will be every time you boot a full installation of Mint. Then again, we go back to what I said at the beginning of this post: is the whole exercise practical? A memory card can only be written to a finite number of times before it fails. Assuming, of course, the phone has the smarts to identify partition changes. BigSteve_G wrote.as I will use a custom version I will have altered my self.Īlternative is enabling persistence mode in SDC, albeit I never used this.Ĭome to think of it, the GParted route (guess #2) is plausible. ![]()
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