Thanks for the work, but without getting too far afield, there are those
of us who are curious as to what happened, and what did you have to do
to fix it?
cd /opt
sudo git clone https://github.com/obsolescence/pidp10
cd /opt/pidp10
this time on the new Raspberry Pi USB 3.0 flash drive with Trixie; made sure to switch to X11 as noted; rebooted - BAM! worked straight out of the box, as it were - including booting into ITS with SW35 depressed during boot.
Apologies! I thought I was taking good notes - and by now I should know not to trust ChatGPT to "remember" with any great accuracy either. But no, no need to go through the additional steps of manually building the PDP-emulator, etc.
I will say: booting from the USB 3.0 drive, running the installation, and then taking the PiDP-10 through some of its paces - it's all going markedly, markedly faster than with the high performance microsSD, much less the standard microSDs I was using previously.
Best of luck with your install!

Quick follow-up. The new Raspberry Pi USB 3 stick diagnoses as follows (SD Card Speed Test):Sequential write speed 342671 KB/sec (target 10000) - PASS
Random write speed 22185 IOPS (target 500) - PASS
Random read speed 9781 IOPS (target 1500) - PASS
Test PASSThat very large sequential write speed number is 10+ x faster than the original microSD and 7+ x faster than the high speed Sandisk max pro microSD also recommended for this application;



Most non-crap (i.e., don't buy the cheapest stuff you can find, buy reputable, name brands and "newer" devices) micro SD cards, USB sticks, and certainly SSDs support wear-leveling and bad block remapping.
Also buying crap flash devices can end up with their stated capacity being higher than their actual capacity. This causes writes past the actual device capacity to "wrap around" and overwrite the lower logical blocks.
It's mostly down to speed at this point if you're comparing name brand devices. NVMe > USB 3 > SD Cards usually. To me, NVMes are the biggest bang for the buck to speed up a system that wasn't using them previously (obviously assuming the HW is "good enough" to make use of them.)
Todd
On Feb 8, 2026, at 6:00 PM, terri-...@glaver.org <terri-...@glaver.org> wrote:
Now all we need is for someone to create a PCIe x1 to Massbus adapter for the Pi 5.
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