To be more specific, I really do not need to move the app itself, only the mail storage so if there is a way to move the storage location of mails from the internal memory to the SD card I would be very interested to know how that is done.

Only if you rooted, you can use data2sd (original version at Google Play; later modification by enthusiasts at XDA), where /data/data linked to /sd-ext/data (or just sdcard mounted to /data). Then ALL application data will be stored on SD Card.


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K-9 Mail's option Account Settings > Storage will allow you to save messages to the first SD card. Most smartphones have no internal SD card, only the external. Thus my (Android 4.1.2) smartphone stores to /sdcard/Android/data/com.fsck.k9/. Most tablets have an internal and an external SD card and K-9 uses the internal. My tablet (also 4.1.2) stores to /storage/sdcard0/Android/data/com.fsck.k9/. AFAIK K-9 cannot store to the removable SD card sdcard1.

If your microSD card is set up as portable storage and you want to switch over to internal storage, select the drive, then tap the menu button in the top right of the screen. Then, select Settings, and tap Format as Internal. Keep in mind that this will erase the contents of the SD card, so make sure all of your important files have been copied to another location before you do this.

This is especially true if you move lots of apps onto the SD card. Loading times, refresh rates, and sync speeds could all decrease dramatically. Sadly, most people likely suffer from this. They use any old SD card they have lying around without considering whether it's the best tool for the job.

If you only need your card for occasional use, storing photos and files on it, then a Class 10 card or higher should be okay. However, if you're shooting a lot of video, or plan on installing entire apps on your card, you should go for the fastest card your phone can handle. Ideally, this would be a UHS-II card for general use or at least a V30 card for video.

It might be tempting to move such games onto your SD card, but this is a bad idea. Even the best cards will not perform fast enough for modern Android games and are much slower than internal storage. A UHS-II card has a maximum read and write speed of 312MB/s; the UFS 4.0 storage used in the Galaxy S23 series offers 4200MB/s read speeds and 2800MB/s write speeds.

The result of gaming with a microSD card is likely to be gameplay glitches, missing graphics, skipped frames, and frequent crashes. To boost your gaming performance on Android, make sure your games are on the internal storage.

Although you can format your SD card so it becomes adopted internal storage, that doesn't mean that your phone will see both disks as a single entity. Therefore, depending on your usage patterns, it might become cumbersome to find the files you need at a given time.

For example, you could end up in a situation where different types of data are stored across the disks. You might have photos and local music on your SD card, but your offline Google Docs and downloaded Chrome files on the internal memory. The more apps you use, the more problematic this fragmentation will become.

SD cards have a limited number of read/write cycles. Every time you access data on it, the remaining lifespan decreases. Naturally, the lifespan also varies depending on the quality of the SD card. A SanDisk product will live longer than a cheap no-name card from eBay.

To further complicate the problem, you might not know how old a spare card is. If you use an old SD that sat around gathering dust for years, you probably have no idea how much use it got in the past. You'll thus not know how long it might keep plodding along.

And remember, unlike traditional hard drives, there might not be any warning signs before an SD card fails. If you don't have backups, you could lose lots of vital work in seconds. To reduce the chances of issues down the road, check out our list of mistakes to avoid when buying a microSD card.

If you try to move your Android phone's SD card to another phone or attempt to access its contents on a computer, you will probably be out of luck. Why? Because when you set up an SD card as local Android storage, the card becomes encrypted to its host device.

Finally, using a microSD card on Android can bring some random quirks. During my own recent usage, I ran into a curious issue. Every time the phone's battery died (which, due to the device's age, was frequently), any shortcuts for apps I had moved onto the SD card vanished from my phone's home screen.

If you've read and understood the points we've made, but you still want to press ahead and use an SD card in your Android device, then go ahead. It might all work out fine. But you need to be aware that issues can occur, and when they do, they will likely have you tearing your hair out in frustration.

Then, I inserted the disk into my Android phone's memory card slot. My phone noticed that the disk is damaged and needs to reformat it before it can be used. I reformatted and sdcard got ready to use in my Android. Also I completely erased my MicroSD card via Android settings (in where you can un/mount the sdcard).

Again, I inserted the disk into my Windows PC, but Windows couldn't detect the memory card drive (E:) and the disk. I used a partitioning and data recovery tool namely Eassos PartitionGuru Proffessional to check and partition the disk. The whole disk was reported by that tool and also other recovery tools with bad sectors. Therefore, I erased the entire disk with overwriting zero (from sector 0 to the last one). However, the bad sector problem still continued.

With my MicroSD card inserted in the phone, I connected the phone to my PC via USB cable. The MicroSD card appeared in My Computer folder as a new drive. I could successfully access the card and do copy/delete operation with it. With my phone still connected to the PC (via USB cable), I scanned the disk for bad sectors using PartitionGuru software. Surprisingly, there was no bad sector with my MicroSD card. However, the disk is not accessible when it is inserted into the PC's memory card reader.

If there is no overwhelming reason to use HFS+, reformat the card in a Windows machine to FAT32. This may be the best solution, since FAT32 performs less manipulation of the file structure during writes, which should lengthen the lifetime of the card because flash memory has a finite number of write cycles per cell.

On Android 10 and up, FUSE provides granular access to storage with extra security features. The root of the SD card is a protected space so an app can start from the root and possibly read everything below it, but it cannot be granted write permission starting from the root. This is what happens when I try to add a new folder in Syncthing with the root of an (unencrypted) SD card on Android 10/11 (my Motorola phone previously ran 10 before upgrading to 11):

Officially, Android 9 and earlier did not support apps writing directly to SD cards. Android could use a SD card to extend the main storage, and apps such as media players, file managers, file transfer and so on could read from a SD card, but not arbitrarily write to one.

If Android allowed an app write access to the root of the SD card and all of its subfolders, the app would have the ability to modify files under /storage/[ID]/Android/data/, which could contain access tokens and other private data.

Go to your file manager and create in Android/data path a folder called md.obsidian (works for internal storage and sd card). Choose that one as a vault in Obsidian app, it worked for me. I hope I can help you.

Hello, I am afraid here we are conflating several bugs. Have you attempted to create a new vault in a subdirectory of SD card. Like you create the directory obsidian Obsidian and then create a vault under it. Does it work if you do so?

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So if you are having a problem with Obsidian and the SD card on your Android phone, I would try the following:

PS:

I only had Obsidian on the Local drive on my Android phone - so when I popped in a USB stick earlier, Obsidian immediately asked for access permission for the SD card on my USB stick and thus both locations worked fine.

One question I have: Will an Android device be able to read SD/Micro-SD-cards that have been formatted and filled by a camera, specifically a Leica M Monochrom? Either by connecting the SD-card or camera via USB, or by inserting a micro-SD in the device.

i use an otg usb/micro adapter card reader-writer along with micro usb to usb cord to get photos (on sd card) into my samsung s2 tablet. i use the free version of rawdroid app to open them. i also use the same set up to get pics/files from laptop to tablet .

So, it doesn't *import* the photos for you, but you can view/edit/delete etc. all the photos right from the card (changing the contents of your card) and/or you can manually *copy* the photos (or a select group) to your tablet's internal storage and then they will be on your tablet until you delete them from internal storage. It makes no different to most of the Android apps; you can see/use the photos in the same way whether they're on your card or copied to the tablet itself.

- to do the above easily, use a microSD card in a full SD adaptor in your camera! Unfortunately, microSD cards cost a little more than standard SD cards for the same GB, but the convenience is worth it if you have a tablet or Chromebook with a microSD card slot.

- consider exploring some 3rd party gallery apps that have different features. I really like F-Stop Gallery ( =com.fstop.photo ) for going through a new batch of photos and giving the 1 to 5 star rating, then deciding what to do with those different star ratings. I happily paid the one time fee for the Pro version. Piktures is also a nice gallery app when you have a lot of photos on your tablet, but F-Stop is nice for rating/tagging/organizing NEW photos as they come in. This metadata is written to your photo file, and stays with the file even if it's uploaded to Google Photos or transferred elsewhere. So, you can take the card out, then put it back in another day and it will still remember tags or star ratings, for example. 006ab0faaa

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