• @BigMikeInAustin
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    157 months ago

    Raspberry Pi Connect needs your Raspberry Pi to be running a 64-bit distribution of Raspberry Pi OS Bookworm that uses the Wayland window server. This in turn means that, for now, you’ll need a Raspberry Pi 5, Raspberry Pi 4, or Raspberry Pi 400.

    At the moment, the Raspberry Pi Connect service has just a single relay (TURN) server, located in the UK. This means that if rpi-connect chooses to relay traffic, the latency can be quite high.

    Our intention is that Raspberry Pi Connect will remain free (as in beer) for individual users with non-relayed connections, with no limit on the number of devices.

    • @ikidd
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      37 months ago

      I miss the name “Raspbian”.

    • @riodoro1
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      27 months ago

      Meanwhile you could just set up all of it yourself and learn a couple of things along the way but instead rPi insists on giving its users training wheels for everything. I think it would be much more useful if they provided a dns service with dynamic ip handling.

      • @Weslee
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        87 months ago

        What’s wrong with training wheels?

        Worst thing all these stupid guides do is not explain what the commands you are entering do.

        • TigrisMorte
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          17 months ago

          The Internet is a dangerous place. Training wheels are for inside a LAN and not exposed to the Internet.

          • @Weslee
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            17 months ago

            Then how do you learn anything to do with the internet?