They're small but mighty.
A Raspberry Pi makes an excellent entry point into home server projects. While it won’t replace a full-blown server or NAS in raw power, it’s versatile enough to handle a surprising range of services.
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 ...
Ever a fan of networking and the Internet (so much that his Pi-powered website hosts a repository of programming, Raspberry Pi, and SQL database tutorials), Breuning took the Raspberry Pi Model B ...
PCWorld demonstrates using Google’s Gemini AI to diagnose Plex Media Server issues through a systematic four-phase checkup ...
You've set up your Raspberry Pi using our easy to follow instructions. You've had a gander at our 25 top fun things to do and now you fancy something a bit more involved. How about making a ...
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, ...
Owners of Google Chromebooks that would like to be able to natively connect their home printer to their Chrome OS system, can now create a Google Cloud Print server using the low cost Raspberry Pi ...
What if you could transform a palm-sized computer into the brain of your next big project, without needing an engineering degree? The Raspberry Pi 5, the latest in the beloved Raspberry Pi series, is ...
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 ...