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NasBerryPi

NasBerryPi

R-Pi NAS Back to RPi Guides. Raspberry Pi Network Attached Storage This project configures your Raspberry Pi to share files with any other computer on your local network. You can add a large hard disk to the RPi and use this to store your important files/photos/videos in a central location. The files on your RPi can be easily accessed from any type of computer which is connected to your network, for example a Windows PC, a Linux PC, A Mac, a smartphone, etc. Warning: Make sure that you store your important files in more than one location. Note: There are two major classes of Network Attached Storage Low-power NAS. This project does not require any coding or compilation. You need to... Edit configuration files on the RPiEnter basic Linux commands to configure users and passwordsUse standard software tools (Windows/Linux/Mac) to add a network drive to your PCConnect computers using ethernet cables The RPi is configured as a Samba server and can expose its files to any Samba client. Before you start to or

Another test RPi Guides Back to the Hub. Community Pages: Tutorials - a list of tutorials. Learn by doing. Guides - a list of informative guides. Projects - a list of community projects. Tasks - for advanced users to collaborate on software tasks. Datasheets - a frambozenier.org documentation project. Education - a place to share your group's project and find useful learning sites. Community - links to the community elsewhere on the web. Games - all kinds of computer games. Introduction This page contains a set of guides to show readers how to do common or useful tasks on the system. The Raspberry Pi Forum has a list of Project Ideas & Links, to help people get started. Please add links to your guides (and ones you find interesting). Fill in each section: Guide Title (as a link to the project webpage or connected wiki page) Guide Description (including any additional links or information Tags (key words related to the item, i.e. System Tasks Easy Medium Advanced

Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Raspberry Pi at Southampton The steps to make a Raspberry Pi supercomputer can be downloaded here [9th Jan 2013 update]: Raspberry Pi Supercomputer (PDF). You can also follow the steps yourself here [9th Jan 2013 update]: Raspberry Pi Supercomputer (html). The press release (11th Sept 2012) for our Raspberry Pi Supercomputer with Lego is here: Press Release University Page The press release is also here (PDF): Press Release (PDF). Pictures are here - including Raspberry Pi and Lego: Press Release (More Pictures). We wrote up our work as a scientific journal publication where you can find further technical details on the build, motivation for the project and benchmarking. The reference to the paper is: Simon J. Iridis-pi: a low-cost, compact demonstration cluster Cluster Computing June 2013 DOI: 10.1007/s10586-013-0282-7 These are some links you may find helpfulul

Sneak Peek: Adafruit Raspberry Pi WebIDE September 19, 2012 AT 2:14 pm We love the Raspberry Pi. This tiny computer has so much potential for makers, and it is offered at an extremely reasonable price. As the name suggests, the Raspberry Pi WebIDE is entirely web based. We have also included a built-in terminal so you can listen to, and talk directly with your Raspberry Pi. We have so many cool things planned for the WebIDE, and expect to have plenty of updates (especially at the beginning). Like I said, this is just a sneak peek, and covers only a few of it’s many features. Stay tuned to the Adafruit blog for more updates. Related Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.

Pi Crust breakout board makes it easy to get peripherals on Raspberry Pi Joe Walnes, a Chicago-based hacker and maker, has just released a design for what he has dubbed the Pi Crust: a very cheap new hardware add-on for the Raspberry Pi. The breakout board, which debuted on Wednesday, is meant to make it easier to tack various hardware peripherals onto the cheap computer, and it does so in an compact design. The new board only adds 2mm of height to the existing Raspberry Pi. As Walnes lays out on his site, there are various well-labelled pins, including GPIO, I2C, SPI, UART, and power. "This makes it so you can connect things directly to a Raspberry Pi. The Raspberry Pi has the capability to do all this stuff, but it’s a bit inconvenient," Walnes told Ars. Expanding access to the Raspberry Pi's General Purpose Input/Output (GPIO) pins is probably one of the most important aspects of this add-on—Arduinos, for example, use GPIOs to read from various environmental sensors. Walnes isn’t selling the Pi Crust; he's just making the design specification available.

Raspberry Pi Peripherals Adjustable Enclosure System The adjustable enclosure system is designed as a sandwich. The Raspberry Pi (Rev B boards with mounting holes) is held by the top cover. The RAS-DAS-1 and any other boards are held in place from the bottom cover. Not Just the Raspberry Pi Most enclosures are designed to house just the Raspberry Pi itself. The adjustable enclosure system was designed from the start to house multpile boards. Raspberry Pi itself one or more accessory cards which connect to the Raspberry Pi such as : RAS-DAS-1 Audio Explorer card Since the enclosure is expandable, even the small size, can hold up to two additional accessory cards. Ventilation, And Access To Ports, And LED's The adjustable enclosure is open on all sides. No Mechanical Strain The Raspberry Pi is held in the enclosure by the two mounting holes (currently only Rev B boards only are supported). The advantage of this solution is that the electrical connector does not experience any mechanical stress.

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