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Backstaber970
Senior Member
435
03-28-2016, 09:48 AM
#11
Looking for a beginner's guide and a suitable Raspberry Pi model to run small tasks?
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Backstaber970
03-28-2016, 09:48 AM #11

Looking for a beginner's guide and a suitable Raspberry Pi model to run small tasks?

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Zoleks
Member
237
03-28-2016, 12:44 PM
#12
I opted for a Raspberry Pi 3b+ during setup, as it performed well. The newer Raspberry Pi 4 offers significant speed thanks to its updated chip. The Pi-Hole site provides guidance: https://pi-hole.net/. For installation steps, refer to https://thepi.io/how-to-install-raspbian...pberry-pi/ and the official Pi-Hole documentation. The Pi-Hole includes around 250k sites in its default blocklist, though I typically select categories from https://blocklist.site/app/ to reduce the blocked domain count to roughly 900k.
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Zoleks
03-28-2016, 12:44 PM #12

I opted for a Raspberry Pi 3b+ during setup, as it performed well. The newer Raspberry Pi 4 offers significant speed thanks to its updated chip. The Pi-Hole site provides guidance: https://pi-hole.net/. For installation steps, refer to https://thepi.io/how-to-install-raspbian...pberry-pi/ and the official Pi-Hole documentation. The Pi-Hole includes around 250k sites in its default blocklist, though I typically select categories from https://blocklist.site/app/ to reduce the blocked domain count to roughly 900k.

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DinglyDongg
Member
174
03-28-2016, 08:50 PM
#13
After seeing it, the limit is clear. If you're looking for a good mini PC, consider what you need and compare prices for RAM, case, power supply, and storage. For your current setup, assess the specs you have and decide what upgrades would fit best.
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DinglyDongg
03-28-2016, 08:50 PM #13

After seeing it, the limit is clear. If you're looking for a good mini PC, consider what you need and compare prices for RAM, case, power supply, and storage. For your current setup, assess the specs you have and decide what upgrades would fit best.

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Shen_456
Junior Member
49
04-05-2016, 09:53 AM
#14
Choose the Raspberry Pi 3b based on your needs, then set up a home server using a VM or Docker.
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Shen_456
04-05-2016, 09:53 AM #14

Choose the Raspberry Pi 3b based on your needs, then set up a home server using a VM or Docker.

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Ocanom
Member
53
04-06-2016, 01:59 PM
#15
It should stay active at all times, so placing the server on a Pi helps isolate what's needed for the network to work. It doesn't matter if the server goes offline, as long as the network functions properly.
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Ocanom
04-06-2016, 01:59 PM #15

It should stay active at all times, so placing the server on a Pi helps isolate what's needed for the network to work. It doesn't matter if the server goes offline, as long as the network functions properly.

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SoyDash
Posting Freak
859
04-14-2016, 02:31 AM
#16
the trick is i don’t have much money, so right now it would just be either me or a simple fix with one really good idea about dns. i can set another dns server to take over so it gets the info, when things go wrong and we need help now i just unplug it and everyone switches to the other one.
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SoyDash
04-14-2016, 02:31 AM #16

the trick is i don’t have much money, so right now it would just be either me or a simple fix with one really good idea about dns. i can set another dns server to take over so it gets the info, when things go wrong and we need help now i just unplug it and everyone switches to the other one.

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