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www.maketecheasier.com
| | quakkels.com
8.9 parsecs away

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| | Raspberry Pis are great little computers. Wonderful for running hobby services. But, whenever I start a new RPi project, I dislike needing to dig out my spare HDMI monitor and USB keyboard. I don't like having to take up room, connect all that hardware, just to enable SSH and Wifi so I don't need any of that equipment I just finished setting up.
| | thisdavej.com
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| | This article has been updated to cover the installation of Raspbian Bullseye Lite. In this tutorial, we're going to build a highly optimized Raspberry Pi system that runs very lean on resources with the help of Raspbian lite. Whereas a baseline Raspbian system consumes around 158 MB of RAM, Raspbian lite runs at a mere 34 MB. To achieve this lighter weight footprint, we must give up the graphical user interface (GUI); however, we'll include steps in the build (and tips) to help us work productively without a GUI.
| | blog.nuculabs.de
7.7 parsecs away

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| | Hi ?? The purpose of this article is to get you started quickly with a Home Assistant on a Raspberry Pi. It's a simple walkthrough on how to install Home Assistant and configure it so it will boot with your PI. I will use my old Raspberry PI V3 board. Flashing the Raspberry PI OS You will need a microSD card of reasonable size, I'm using a 16GB one and a USB Adapter to connect it with my PC.
| | austinmorlan.com
17.3 parsecs away

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| I recently purchased a new laptop (Dell XPS 13 9370) and needed to install Arch onto it. I thought I'd finally document the steps I took because I always seem to forget what I did the last time (one of the joys of Arch is that it rarely needs to be reinstalled). There are a lot of helpful guides online about different installation setups, but I could never find one that met all of my requirements: