If you’re not familiar with how DNS works, I recommend reading Marco Chiappetta’s article about how to speed up your DNS. If it still sounds complex, there’s a comic series that explains how DNS works ...
Ever since the announcement of the Raspberry Pi, sites all across the Internet have offered lots of interesting and challenging uses for this exciting device. Although all of those ideas are great, ...
Following on from their previous project which detailed how to install GitLab on the Raspberry Pi 4, Hackster.io member Mikrocontroller Projekte has published a new project providing more details ...
This article will only explore setting up the server for use on local networks, not through the internet. At this point in the series, you’ve set up Arch Linux ARM on your Raspberry Pi and you are ...
XDA Developers on MSN
I stopped treating my Raspberry Pi like a tiny server — and it finally clicked
I got more out of my Raspberry Pi once I stopped treating it like a tiny server and started using it like a dedicated home lab appliance.
I have written a few articles previously on ESXi on Arm (located here, here and here). In those articles, I covered everything from going over what you need to install ESXi on a Raspberry Pi 4 B ...
January 27, 2014 Add as a preferred source on Google Add as a preferred source on Google Setting up a household music server using your own computer is usually pretty simple, but if you'd rather have ...
When the Raspberry Pi Foundation announced Raspbian (Debian) Stretch for x86 and Macs, there was a very brief mention of something called PiServer to manage multiple Pi clients on a network, with a ...
How-To Geek on MSN
Why a Raspberry Pi is actually a terrible choice for a Plex server (and what you should use instead)
Raspberry Pis are not good for absolutely everything.
The Raspberry Pi 4 is the most powerful single board computer from Raspberry Pi so far, with a quad-core ARM Cortex-A72 processor and support for up to 8GB of RAM. It’s capable of performing as a ...
If you haven’t already set up the “sudo” software and a separate non-root account on your Raspberry Pi, and you plan to have it accessible to the public on a network, I would recommend you do so. You ...
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