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since quite some time i'm running ubuntu on an external hard disk, connected to the PC via USB. This works quite well. I recently got a 32GB USB stick and i installed (so no live USB) Ubuntu 11.10 on it. I found this more practical because smaller than a hard disk. BUT the OS it is running a lot slower than with the HD. I checked transfer rates and compared with the HD and it looks as if the USB is quicker than the HD. Any idea why? I partitioned the USB stick like this: first a swap area of about 2GB, then the ext4 root partion and last an NTFS partition.

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  • if your 4Gb USB was USB 2.0 then it wasnt "falling back" to USB 2.0 but using it and "falling back" only to USB 1.0. "Falling back" means running at falled back speed.
    – Kangarooo
    Dec 23, 2012 at 3:23

2 Answers 2

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USB Flash drives performance is inferior to traditional hard drives. It's just a different technology and not as fast. The illustrious Jeff Atwood has an article explaining this in detail on his Coding Horror site, where he goes into more detail. Lots more detail.

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  1. Get the fastest drive you can afford (so-called 150x or better).
  2. Change to a non-journaled file system. Ext2 is good.
  3. Edit /etc/fstab to enable async I/O.
  4. Disable swapping - don't make a swap partition or file.
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  • Are you sure that ext2 faster than ext4 for installed Ubuntu at slow usb? Nov 7, 2015 at 18:43

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