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Early versions of the Raspberry Pi could only boot from SD cards, but newer ones can boot from any USB device, like an external drive or USB stick. Here's how.
The Raspberry Pi Foundation is a non-profit that’s working to get the little computer into classrooms where children can learn to use and even program computers.
I like my Raspberry Pi media server, but I have concerns. I hate USB-SATA adapter cables on asthetic grounds, and physically managing a handful of SSDs is not optimal. So currently I'm using some ...
Posted in Raspberry Pi Tagged CRT TV, digital signage, looper, mini tv, raspberry pi, Raspberry Pi Zero W, thumb drive ← High Speed The Way We Want It Retrotechtacular: The Nernst Lamp → ...
After previously writing about installing ESXi on Arm on a Raspberry Pi, Tom Fenton walks through the process of using a USB flash drive as a local datastore on the Pi.
This was accomplished using an application called Hercules. In the video, we see one module fitted with an Ethernet jack and USB 2.0 connection on one side with the USB Type-C port connected to ...
I just learned accidentally that if you use a Sandisk USB flash drive in a Raspberry Pi, you could void your Sandisk warranty. Assuming they find out about it, of course.