Nowadays, digital technology influences even the most minor details of our lives and has become a part of our day-to-day activities. Devices like laptops, phones, smart devices (like fridges, TVs, lightbulbs, coffee makers, security gadgets), and much more now have access to our networks (wired or wireless). However, that also raises another issue – Network Security and Reliability of these …
Tony G
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Since the first Raspberry Pi release, these small board computers (SBCs) only supported booting from SD card or Micro SD card until the Raspberry Pi 2 Model B release. That opened a whole new world of possibilities that you could do with the Raspberry. But, unfortunately, not many people are aware of this feature or even utilizing it.
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Since Raspberry Pi 3 in 2016 release, the Raspberry Pi foundation included support for built-in Bluetooth connectivity in all the following Raspberry releases. That came as a relief to users who wanted to utilize the Bluetooth feature to connect wireless peripherals like headsets, other PCs, game controllers that support Bluetooth connectivity and carry out Bluetooth-related projects.
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The Raspberry Pi comes with a 1-wire Interface bus used to connect sensor modules when working on IoT projects. For example, one such sensor is the DS18B20 used to measure temperature. 1-wire interface is basically a single wire which can carry out multiple functions, including low-speed data transfer, power over a single conductor, and signaling. Practically, the Raspberry Pi supports …
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Since its first release in 2012, the Raspberry Pi has never shipped with a power button. Of course, that is due to cost matters and the idea of making the Pi flexible to handle an array of projects ranging from anything like embedded IoT projects, Media Center, Network Attached Storage (NAS) to using it as a regular Desktop. However, you …
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