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Raspberry Pi Networking Cookbook


A Raspberry Pi 2, with its 900MHz quad-core processor, has more processing power than a network server from the late-1990s. Created as an educational tool to inspire the next generation of programmers, the Raspberry Pi is also an excellent network server. It can be used to share files, host websites, create Internet access points, and analyze network traffic. Multiple Raspberry Pis can be clustered to create a single, highly available, and fault-tolerant super computer. This book shows you how. The Raspberry Pi Foundation recognized that computers had become so expensive and arcane that programming experimentation on them had to be forbidden by parents. The parental restrictions on using computers had created a year-on-year decline in the numbers and skills levels of the A Level students applying to read Computer Science. So, the Foundation set out to create a computer that was "affordable, and powerful enough to provide excellent multimedia, a feature we felt would make the board desirable to kids who wouldn't initially be interested in a purely programming-oriented device". 2 million Raspberry Pis were sold in the first two years of its release, which was not limited to educators and school children. Hobbyists were also excited to use the inexpensive Linux-based computer in their projects. In February 2015, the quad-core Raspberry Pi 2 was released with significantly more power and memory than the original, which was more than enough memory and power for many typical server applications.
Rick Golden - Personal Name
Second Edition
NONE
Information Technology
English
2016
1-352
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