In my experience, one of the highest-impact upgrades you can perform to increase Raspberry Pi performance is to buy the fastest possible microSD card—especially for applications where you need to do a lot of random reads and writes.
There is an order-of-magnitude difference between most cheap cards and the slightly-more-expensive ones (even if both are rated as being in the same class)—especially in small-block random I/O performance. As an example, if you use a normal, cheap microSD card for your database server, normal database operations can literally be 100x slower than if you used a standard microSD card.
Because of this, I went and purchased over a dozen different cards and have been putting them through their paces. Here are the results of those efforts...
Visit TFA for the full table. The overall winner seems to be OWC Envoy SSD (USB), with hdparm buffered: 34.13 MB/s; dd write: 34.4 MB/s; 4K rand read: 7.06 MB/s; 4K rand write: 8.20 MB/s
takyon: The value winner in the article is the Samsung Evo+ 32 GB (purchased for $9.99 from Best Buy) with decent/passable speeds.
(Score: 2) by richtopia on Friday December 04 2015, @07:35PM
In the name of the card they listed the class; all of them but one had C10 to designate class 10
(Score: 2) by frojack on Friday December 04 2015, @07:40PM
Perhaps if you followed the links inside the article but simple inspection of TFA reveals that what you claim simply isn't true. Only three cards had a class number in TFA.
No, you are mistaken. I've always had this sig.