Ubuntu Core 24, an OS for IoT devices, launches with a new factory install system, GPU support for AI applications, support for Raspberry Pi 5, and more. https://linuxiac.com/ubuntu-core-24-released/
“The Raspberry Pi AI Kit bundles an M.2-format Hailo 8L AI accelerator with the Raspberry Pi M.2 HAT+ to provide an accessible, cost-effective, and power-efficient way to integrate high-performance AI with the Raspberry Pi 5."
£65.7 incl. VAT (coming soon)
Could it accelerate systems like #Ollama ? as I am interested in having a Pi 5 running as a “Sidecar” to offer AI services to #MoodleBox (#Moodle on the Pi)
I love my #raspberrypi army (1xPi1, 1xPi2, 2xPi3, 1xPi4, all running different things), but on a drunken whim I ended up sniping a bare bone Intel nuc5i5ryh for $20 and threw in ram/HDD i had sitting around and that thing is a beast
threw #proxmox on it and have basically consolidated the functions of all those #Pi boxes into one VM with processing and memory to spare
I made good progress on the #AI collaboration project with @Jorvon_Moss over the weekend. The #Nvidia Orin Nano boots up the servers and WiFi hotspot automatically. You just need to run Hopper Chat on the #RaspberryPi. No internet required! #LLM#ChatGPT
I have two choices to run Home Assistant on my future #Pi5. With HAOS and as a Docker container. My idea was initially HAOS, but the Pi5 will be equipped with an SSD, have 8GB and may be able to take on other tasks. That's why a OS Lite 64 bit might be more flexible. Are there any major advantages to HAOS (apart from being efficient with resources)?
Deep joy. Greedy RealVNC is taking away the ability to use more than three copies of it at home, free. I shall, of course, switch to TightVNC. I expect they thought aged hobbyists had loads of money they could grab...
Ok, ich habe mich entschieden. Home Assistant kommt auf einen Raspberry Pi 5 (8GB) mit 256GB M.2 SSD. Argon Expansion Board und Gehäuse (diesmal nicht selbst gedruckt).
Ich möchte doch gerne mehr auf die dedizierte Lösung setzen. Das Synology NAS ist aus dem Support raus und ich möchte es etwas mehr aus dem Blickfeld des wilden Internets nehmen.
One of the most fundamental yet little-known features of FreeBSD is its ability to be used in read-only mode very easily. By installing the system on a UFS file system, you just need to modify the fstab file, change "rw" to "ro," and reboot. On the next boot, the system will automatically create mount points in RAM for the main directories (/tmp, log, etc.), and it will run perfectly.
This was the main reason why, many years ago, I chose FreeBSD for almost all my embedded systems. Even today, on my Raspberry Pies, I keep the SD cards in read-only mode and use external storage in read-write mode. This ensures that, in case of an unexpected poweroff, the system will come back up, and there will be no wear on the memory card.