This page permanently redirects to gemini://gemini.complete.org/raspberry-pi/.
One of several single-board computers. The Raspberry Pi is an ARM computer that typically sells for less than $50. Generally is runs a derivative of Debian[1].
=> 1: /debian/
Others such as the Pine64 are less popular but even more open.
=> 2: /installing-debian-backports-on-raspberry-pi/ | 3: /nncp/ | 4: /yggdrasil/ | 5: /consider-security-first/ | 6: /live-migrating-from-raspberry-pi-os-bullseye-to-debian-bookworm/
=> 7: /consider-security-first/
I write this in the context of my decision to ditch Raspberry Pi OS and move everything I possibly can, including my Raspberry Pi[8] devices, to Debian[9]. I will write about that later.
=> 8: /raspberry-pi/ | 9: /debian/
Filespooler lets you request the remote execution of programs, including stdin and environment. It can use tools such as S3, Dropbox, Syncthing[11], NNCP[12], ssh, UUCP[13], USB drives, CDs, etc. as transport; basically, a filesystem is the network for Filespooler.
Filespooler is particularly suited to distributed and Asynchronous Communication[14].
=> 11: /syncthing/ | 12: /nncp/ | 13: /uucp/ | 14: /asynchronous-communication/
Filespooler lets you request the remote execution of programs, including stdin and environment. It can use tools such as S3, Dropbox, Syncthing[16], NNCP[17], ssh, UUCP[18], USB drives, CDs, etc. as transport; basically, a filesystem is the network for Filespooler.
Filespooler is particularly suited to distributed and Asynchronous Communication[19].
=> 16: /syncthing/ | 17: /nncp/ | 18: /uucp/ | 19: /asynchronous-communication/
=> 20: /installing-debian-backports-on-raspberry-pi/
This page is intended to describe how to run Debian[21]'s backports[22] on a Raspberry Pi[23] running Raspberry Pi OS (Raspbian).
=> 21: /debian/ | 22: https://backports.debian.org/ | 23: /raspberry-pi/
Yggdrasil is a Mesh Network[25] that is fully Encrypted[26] and provides an IPv6 IP on the network to anyone.
=> 25: /mesh-network/ | 26: /encrypted/
=> 27: /old-and-small-technology/
Old technology is any tech that's, well... old.
=> 28: /nncp/
NNCP lets you securely send files, or request remote execution, between systems. It uses asynchronous communication[29], so the source and destination need never be online simultaneously. NNCP can route requests via intermediate devices -- other NNCP nodes, USB sticks, tapes, radios, phones, cloud services, whatever -- leading to a network that is highly resilient and flexible. NNCP makes it much easier to communicate with devices that lack Internet connectivity, or have poor Internet.
=> 29: /asynchronous-communication/
=> Homepage
=> Interesting Topics
=> How This Site is Built
=> About John Goerzen
=> Web version of this site
(c) 2022-2024 John Goerzen
text/gemini; charset=utf-8; lang=en; size=4216
This content has been proxied by September (ba2dc).