Deepthaw wrote to All <=-
So what's everybody done with the Raspberry Pi? I know there's several BBSes running off of some Pis out in the wild, but there's just so many ideas out there.
So what's everybody done with the Raspberry Pi? I know there's several BBSes running off of some Pis out in the wild, but there's just so many ideas out there.
Right now, I have one configured with Retropie in my living room - this is my retro gaming station. My second one has been recycled from project to
Re: Raspberry Pi
By: Deepthaw to All on Tue Jun 20 2017 09:42 pm
I have several SD cards setup for my PI, I have retro PI set up on a 16GB SD for the grand kids, I originally ran Mystic BBS on my PI, then I bought a windows thin client and run Synchronet on that.
I have been thinking about buying the weather kit and running a weather station.
Also I have an SD card set up just to play around with Ubuntu.
So what's everybody done with the Raspberry Pi? I know there's several BBSes D>running off of some Pis out in the wild, but there's just so many ideas out D>there.
So what's everybody done with the Raspberry Pi? I know there's several BBSes running off of some Pis out in the wild, but there's just so many ideas out there.
A weather station could be very cool. I work at a college (I don't teach, I'm support staff) and I'm always looking for excuses to setup Pis around here. Maybe I could approach a teacher about doing a guest session to setup a weather station for the campus?that would be cool, no pun intended
I was trying to use my 2B as my main personal machine... I mostly only use the current box for surfing the internet and checking e-mail. However, it seems to bog down a lot. My single-core 900Mhz Pentium III, running debian with icewm, is a lot faster.
I sometimes wonder if something is not wrong with the Pi. Even now that everything is on a USB drive, it is still pretty dang slow (although that is an improvement over the card).
I cannot imagine ever trying to use it to stream video.
So what's everybody done with the Raspberry Pi?
So what's everybody done with the Raspberry Pi? I know there's several BBS D>running off of some Pis out in the wild, but there's just so many ideas ou D>there.
I don't know much about Raspberry Pi...but a pineapple upside down cheesecake sounds awfully good right now. <G>
Daryl
Well, the Pi 3 is about twice as fast as the 2B. More importantly, the RPI has >hardware video decoding - this is why it can stream video so well while >struggling to render webpages. Unfortunately, they don't have the >plugins/wrappers out there to let you use this hardware decoding on websites, >so stuff like YouTube and Netflix still struggles.
So what's everybody done with the Raspberry Pi? I know there's several D>running off of some Pis out in the wild, but there's just so many ideas D>there.
I don't know much about Raspberry Pi...but a pineapple upside down cheesecake sounds awfully good right now. <G>
Daryl
It really does! Next time we get together, let's go someplace that serves CK>cake!!! LOL
Jagossel wrote to Deepthaw <=-
- "Reverse" Wi-Fi access point: I've been wanting to have the
Raspberry Pi to connect to my Wi-Fi network and have it as a bridged network to the Ethernet port (or have it be a NAT), and have it
connected to my 5-port switch; reducing Wi-Fi traffic at home.
- "AIO" Kids Computer: this one, I question if a Raspberry Pi is a
good fit. Apparently, there are VESA monitor mounts for the Raspberry
Pi. I would like to create an "All-In-One" computer for the kids with educational/edutainment software and limited access to the Internet. I have a monitor with VESA mount points to where I can put the VESA case
on it, and just hook everything in.
You could do this, but it is a wast of a good Pi and cheaper to buy such bridges online. I recently bought 2 bridges from GearBest for US$13-$14 each that will do what you want - I have a similar need here. But if the aim is to do it as a purely educational exercise in building a bridge (get over it? :D ), then go for it. :)
Deepthaw wrote to Vk3jed <=-
The nice thing about a Pi is that if running it as a bridge isn't too system intensive, you can do other stuff on it at the same time, such
as run a PiHole (network wide ad-blocking) or file-sharing.
Deepthaw wrote to Vk3jed <=-
Unfortunately, I don't think the Pi is going to have the "oomph" to run
a lot of the stuff you'd want for a children's AIO. It struggles with YouTube, and Netflix can be hard to get working as well.
It *does* come with a lot of educational stuff preinstalled, but it's mostly programming related. I bought a used Dell Optiplex today for
$40, and it is already outdoing the Pi as far as a cheap usable PC
would go.
It *does* come with a lot of educational stuff preinstalled, but it's mostly programming related. I bought a used Dell Optiplex today for $40, and it is already outdoing the Pi as far as a cheap usable PC would go.
- "Reverse" Wi-Fi access point: I've been wanting to have the Raspberry Pi to connect to my Wi-Fi network and have it as a bridged network to the Ethernet port (or have it be a NAT), and have it connected to my 5-port switch; reducing Wi-Fi traffic at home.
Unfortunately, I don't think the Pi is going to have the "oomph" to run a lot
of the stuff you'd want for a children's AIO. It struggles with YouTube, and Netflix can be hard to get working as well.
It *does* come with a lot of educational stuff preinstalled, but it's mostly programming related. I bought a used Dell Optiplex today for $40, and it is already outdoing the Pi as far as a cheap usable PC would go.
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