On Jun 15, 2015, at 14:56 , Dave G4UGM <dave.g4ugm
at gmail.com> wrote:
A friend of mine refused to buy modern SD Cards because there was no way he
was going to fill them. Trouble is that although smaller SD cards were
available they were way more expensive (being discontinued and therefore
rare and valuable).. He struggled with buying a larger card only to waste
most of it, or buy a smaller one and waste his money....
I had that same mental hangup when thinking about how I might design an SD card based TU58
emulator in the same form factor as a TU58 cartridge (still on my to-do list, by the way).
How was I going to implement the user interface? It's not like there's much room
for an LCD or buttons on the edge of a TU58 cartridge. Then it finally hit me: SD cards
are cheaper than TU58 cartridges ever were. So why not just use the first 256k, ignore the
rest of the card, and swap cards exactly the way one would swap TU58 cartridges, with one
image on each card? Yeah, 99% of the card is "wasted", but they're presently
cheap and plentiful enough to ignore that.
Ok, I might actually have the emulator read a file from a DOS filesystem rather than using
the first 256k of raw blocks. But it'll probably just be a fixed filename with no
controls to select a different one, and the expectation that an entire (cheap, plentiful)
SD card will be devoted to each tape image. At least this way, other things can also be on
the card, so it doesn't need to be wasted if not needed.
Your friend should understand that the larger card that he would be "wasting"
probably has less silicon in it than the older one with less capacity. The cheapest card
that is reliable, fast enough and large enough for his task is the best one to get, even
if it's much larger than he needs. Just one of the weird parts of the Moore's Law
curve!
Hmm, this reminds me that back in the day, floppy disks were expensive. We have it easy
with cheap and plentiful SD cards nowadays. But maybe my perspective is different as an
employed adult rather than a teenager with limited funds? Anyway, SD cards seem to be
cheap enough to be nearly disposable nowadays.
--
Mark J. Blair, NF6X <nf6x at nf6x.net>
http://www.nf6x.net/