the story behind pi3g
Back in 2012 the story of Maximilian and the Raspberry Pi started. He was excited when he got his first Pi and also saw the great potential for further development in it.
Then PiCockpit was born to make using and managing the Pi easier and more accessible for everyone.
Maximilian has always been interested in computers and believed that they are a lever to improve everything in the world - for example in medicine.
Over the years, Maximilian's work has grown and new fields of expertise have emerged...
working at pi3g
In our blog you can expect blog posts about technology and business topics, of course about the Raspberry Pi, but also a wide variety of topics related to Industrie 4.0, IoT, and machine learning - for example about the popular MQTT protocol, Python and Linux embedded development, and much more. Blog entries are not scheduled and not in particular order - the topics are an eclectic mix of what comes up in real life of a company engaged in machine learning & Raspberry Pi embedded adventures.
We are happy to write about special topics that are not so well-documented elsewhere.
If you have any suggestions, we are happy to discuss current topics with you and are always ready to brainstorm workable solutions with you.
Building a persistent in-line editing experience with Crystal, MongoDB (datanoise / sam0x17)
As documentation is still sparse, I would like to add some.This is what I am building currently:The individual fields are going to be editable with an inline editor, which will automatically save to the backend – no need for reloading the whole page.The point of the whole is a backend for my company, to be…
read moreQ&A LetsTrust TPM
This is a series of questions and answers for our LetsTrust TPM module. If you have an industrial project, and are looking at 100+ units, we’re happy to work with you to modify the product, if necessary. Contact us for details. Is there the possibility to support the TPM module on the Linux Kernel 3.1?…
read moreWLAN password Anonymebox 3B+
Usually the WLAN password for the Anonymebox 3B+ is set to a random password during manufacturing. It is shipped to you with a silver label, carrying the WLAN password on it which is set. If you order the image, or upgrade from an earlier Anonymebox firmware, there is a default password which is set. The…
read moreAlpine 3.9.0 initramfs init changes
Alpine 3.9.0 ships a new version of the init script in it’s initramfs. left: Alpine 3.9.0, right: Alpine 3.8.2 There are a number of interesting changes: better and earlier networking support for the boot process, with an additional kernel parameter for cmdline.txt: BOOTIF, allowing you to specify the device interface you want to use for…
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