On 3/7/13 10:30 PM, Dan Egli wrote: > *Hey, has anyone used that Raspberry Pi single-board-computer? I'm looking > into getting something like that setup as a tinker project but had a couple > of questions. If someone knows the answers to these, please let me know. > Thanks!* > > * * > > *1) What kind of power supply device do I need to get the Pi running, and > where can I get one?* It has a microusb connector for power. > > *2) I know the Pi has USB ports on it. Does that mean I could take a > standard USB Wi-Fi adapter like I'd grab from Staples off the shelf and > make it work on the Pi?* Yes. I've had success with http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B006ZZUK5Y/ref=oh_details_o03_s00_i00?ie=UTF8&psc=1 personally. See also: http://elinux.org/RPi_VerifiedPeripherals#USB_Wi-Fi_Adapters
You'll want a powered usb hub to reliably power things like wifi adapters with the pi. > > *3) Has anyone heard how well PC centric programs like Wine would work on > it? Not for major things or games, but smaller things like maybe Quicken or > maybe some Windows based file sharing program like Shareaza or something? * wine is x86 only. The pi is arm. > *4) What is a safe surface to place the Pi on so as to avoid excess static? > I know the device doesn't have a case of it's own so is it safe to, for > example, leave the pi in it's box while it's running? This is in case my > Niece & Nephew come to visit. Especially my Nephew loves to look at > anything that is electronic and then frequently leaves it on the floor. > Since most of my home is carpet that could lead to a catastrophic static > buildup. I figured if it's in it's box (or some other generic container) > then he (and she for that matter, although not as much) are less likely to > grab it, and if they DO grab it it would theoretically survive being > dragged across the carpet a few feet.* It's a computer-- I bought a plastic case that mine goes in. > *5) What's the biggest SD Card you've ever heard of running on the Pi? The > mentions I saw of it spoke of 4GB and 8GB cards. I would hope it supports > at least 64GB cards. Do cards go above 128GB? It seems to me I've heard of > 256GB cards but I could be mistaken.* As far as I know, it supports sdhc, which means up to 32gb > *6) Since it's a distribution of Debian (even if modified) that runs on it, > I'm assuming standard tools like Firefox and such can be found without the > need to try and compile them on the Pi (compiling the latest Firefox on a > 700MHz cpu would take a lot of time I'd rather skip). Has anyone heard > differently?* raspbian does have iceweasel in its repos (iceweasel is the firefox fork that's in upstream debian)
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