gyptazy.ch is a Fediverse instance that uses the ActivityPub protocol. In other words, users at this host can communicate with people that use software like Mastodon, Pleroma, Friendica, etc. all around the world.

This server runs the snac software and there is no automatic sign-up process.

Admin email
contact@gyptazy.ch
Admin account
@gyptazy@gyptazy.ch

Search results for #raspberrypi

Steve Lord »
@stevelord@bladerunner.social

Ricardo Martín »
@fluxwatcher@mastodon.social

Ricardo Martín »
@fluxwatcher@mastodon.social

Thorsten Leemhuis (acct. 1/4) »
@kernellogger@fosstodon.org

might soon start supporting the 5 thx to patches from Andrea della Porta:

lore.kernel.org/lkml/cover.171 – Add minimal boot support for Raspberry Pi 5

If you just thought "But Linux already supports the , see ", then you just learned why differentiating between the called Linux (meant here) and operating systems called Linux (often build from forks of the former carrying modifications and enhancements) is important.

adingbatponder »
@adingbatponder@fosstodon.org

@memo Und was für ein System ist auf den ?

Paul »
@plwt@mstdn.social

Completed a small project tonight, adding a fourth Pico to my Pi 4. This one is my first gen Pico, configured to flash it's LED if the temperature is too high or too low.

Aside from tidying up the code for the Picos, the setup is functionally complete. Really happy with how it has turned out.

_leonov420 »
@_leonov420@mastodon.bsd.cafe

I just wanted to try/test a patch from netbsd-users mailing list, related to ZFS ARC sizing on an RPI4 with 4GB ram.
Managed to patch the sources and complile kernel/modules. (NetBSD 10 Release)
However, when I try to import the pool, I get this error. The disk was used with FreeBSD 14R before.
I guess, there is no easy/quick fix for this.

MIR-NETBSD# zpool import -f  zBSD
This pool uses the following feature(s) not supported by this system:
	com.klarasystems:vdev_zaps_v2
cannot import 'zBSD': unsupported version or feature

Axel ⌨🐧🐪🚴😷 | R.I.P Natenom »
@xtaran@chaos.social

I should open the window. My ₂ meter went full tilt.

(Source code and instructions at github.com/xtaran/co2-led-mete)

A DIY CO₂ meter built on a Raspberry Pi Zero, Pimoroni's Breakout Garden, the Pimoroni LED shim and a Sensirion CO₂ sensor plugged together as USB stick showing an LED bar with colors from purple over red and yellow to green over its full width. An Ethernet switch and grey and orange Ethernet cables in the background.

Paul »
@plwt@mstdn.social

I realised over the weekend that the pace of work on my winter projects has slowed. I have achieved a good few things and the plan did get me through the dark cold winter months. I enjoyed the courses I took and am really pleased with on the .

Some of the courses and projects I did not get to will be very useful, so instead of calling time, I think I will continue to proceed, but at a slower tempo and with a rebalanced focus on enjoying the summer.

DesRoin »
@DesRoin@geekdom.social

9to5Linux »
@9to5linux@floss.social

adingbatponder »
@adingbatponder@fosstodon.org

Friend has on which does not want to control node via nor . Any ideas what issue might be? Cheers.

DesRoin »
@DesRoin@geekdom.social

Never worked with before and I need it for an upcoming project... so I'm using my to manage all other in my home. Even reinstalled my old 3 with to have a different OS and system in the network xD
The way things look right now I'll have a lot of time on my hands to figure this out...

No description

Paul »
@plwt@mstdn.social

Having previously set one to be a mini web server providing approximate room temperature available in , spent some time this evening working with my second Pico W.

Again it is a web server accessible through NextCloud, but this one is a password generator.

Pleased with how it has turned out - a good result.

adingbatponder »
@adingbatponder@fosstodon.org

jbz »
@jbzfn@mastodon.social

🎉 NetBSD 10.0 Released With Much Improved Hardware Support & Faster Performance | Phoronix

10 provides support, support for many newer platforms including for and newer boards, a new Intel Ethernet drive, support for Realtek 2.5GbE network adapters, performance improvements, automatic swap encryption, and an enormous amount of other hardware support improvements that accumulated over the past 4+ years 」

phoronix.com/news/NetBSD-10.0-

adingbatponder »
@adingbatponder@fosstodon.org

Ricardo Martín »
@fluxwatcher@mastodon.social

The CM5 is expected to launch before the end of 2024. However, it's too early to know whether it could be used to upgrade the RPI-CM4 if I buy one now... choices, choices.
clockworkpi.com/uconsole

jbz »
@jbzfn@mastodon.social

🐧 Linux 6.8 Is Very Exciting With Intel Xe Driver, Raspberry Pi 5 Graphics & New Hardware | Phoronix

「 Imagination PowerVR Rogue DRM driver was upstreamed, initial Raspberry Pi 5 graphics driver support, support for several cheap ARM-based handheld game consoles, Nintendo Switch Online controller support, continued Linux kernel scheduler tuning, and a network TCP performance boost for many concurrent connections 」

phoronix.com/news/Linux-6.8-Fe

82mhz »
@82mhz@oldbytes.space

I'm looking for a cheap but still good sounding USB audio interface for . Doesn't need to be audiophile quality, but shouldn't be incredibly noisy obviously. Only line level audio output is needed.

Any suggestions?

Ricardo Martín »
@fluxwatcher@mastodon.social

Today is the :
A great project until they decided to make an initial public offering (IPO) in London in 2024 🤷‍♂️

0 ★ 0 ↺

gyptazy »
@gyptazy@gyptazy.ch

adingbatponder »
@adingbatponder@fosstodon.org

Should work for on ? Anyone manage ? Examples welcome of any working cases most welcome. I am looking at flasher.meshtastic.org/
which did not work for my nixOS trying to set up on . I seem to remember I always have to go to my windows machine to flash stuff... e.g. .

Klaus Zimmermann »
@kzimmermann@fosstodon.org

As much as I hate to admit it, might actually be lighter and faster than on Linux in the .

It can even run Office365+MS Teams on just over 3GB RAM total use.

(merit for that being of Debian for the efficience, not MS's)

Florian Wilhelm »
@fwilhe@social.tchncs.de

Is it somewhere documented how the source tree for is maintained? It seems to be happening completely on Github, which sounds weird when comparing to the upstream development process. How do they pull updates into the branches?

No description

Steven Rosenberg »
@passthejoe@ruby.social

Stefano Marinelli »
@stefano@mastodon.bsd.cafe

A few days ago, there was a blackout in the entire area. When the power came back on, the circuit breaker tripped, cutting off the power throughout the house, but it reactivated itself after a few minutes (it performs a low-voltage test on the entire circuit and reactivates if it doesn't detect any issues after a few minutes). Since then, I've noticed that some of the home automations stopped working, and some files on a Raspberry Pi (running FreeBSD in read-only mode) controlling the outdoor lighting have become unreadable.
Just now, I checked because the automations are managed by Sonoff smart switches (running Sonoff-Tasmota firmware) with static IPs. They've all lost their configurations—retaining only the Wi-Fi settings since I hard-coded those into the firmware during installation. Looks like I'll have to reprogram them all...
The circuit breaker likely tripped because, when the power was restored, they supplied a very high voltage.

DesRoin »
@DesRoin@geekdom.social

Otherwise I've only been running my 3 as a retro console, hence I never really had to worry about anything on that either. It just worked like you'd expect a normal PC to work.
Feels good getting back into this, but the detailed documentation and how things work together is still a big secret for me on the

DesRoin »
@DesRoin@geekdom.social

Thing is, my knowledge is still limited. I did use the original 1 back in the days running ARMedslack (SlackwareARM nowadays) which was heck of a lot of work to get it running.
However I've only used it for a University project so I stopped tinkering once , and a proper web server were running on it.
Used it to read and store data from a SmartMeter to then provide plotting via web for it. That was the sh*t back in the days ^^

SecBSD »
@secbsd@exquisite.social

🔐 SecBSD 1.4 Released for ARM64!

We are thrilled to announce the release of SecBSD 1.4 for Raspberry Pi, Apple M1/M2 Pine64 and more!

Download SecBSD 1.4 for ARM64:

mirror.secbsd.org/pub/SecBSD/s
mirror.laylo.nl/pub/SecBSD/sna

Supported hardware:

Apple Mac mini (M1, 2020)
Apple MacBook Air (13-inch, M2, 2022)
Apple MacBook Air (M1, 2020)
Apple MacBook Pro (13-inch, M1, 2020)
Apple MacBook Pro (13-inch, M2, 2022)
Apple MacBook Pro (14-inch, M1 Pro/Max, 2021)
Apple MacBook Pro (14-inch, M2 Pro/Max, 2023)
Apple MacBook Pro (16-inch, M1 Pro/Max, 2021)
Apple MacBook Pro (16-inch, M2 Pro/Max, 2023)
Apple MacBoot Air (15-inch, M2, 2023)
Apple Studio (M1 Max/Ultra, 2022)
Apple iMac (24-inch, M1, 2021)
Banana Pi BPI-M5
NanoPi A64
NanoPi R5S
Orange Pi PC2
Orange Pi Zero Plus
Pine64 H64
Pine64 Pine 64/64+
Pine64 Pinebook
Pine64 ROCK64
Pine64 ROCKPro64
Pinebook Pro
Qualcomm Snapdragon 7cx
Qualcomm Snapdragon 8cx Gen 3
Raspberry Pi 3
Raspberry Pi 3 Model B+
Raspberry Pi 4
Raspberry Pi 400
Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4

In the coming days, we'll be adding more hacking tools for arm64. Stay tuned for updates!

No description

Paul »
@plwt@mstdn.social

@gyptazy From what I understand, the temporary issue with the Pi 5 is being resolved > tomshardware.com/raspberry-pi/

While this is about the Pi 5, the Pi 4 is still a very good option and still being produced.

I am guessing that the 90k headline number includes a large amount of commercial users, but broadly speaking it looks like Pi is very much back on the menu.