Author Topic: May 2022 APCUG Free Workshops  (Read 598 times)

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rsutter

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May 2022 APCUG Free Workshops
« on: May 16, 2022, 08:32:58 AM »
Hello All,
This is a re-post of an announcement sent by SLO Bytes parent organization, APCUG
Ralph Sutter

MAY 2022
WEDNESDAY WORKSHOPS
9am PT, 10 am MT, 11 am CT, 12 pm ET
 
5/18/22 -- Learning Linux: Headless Raspberry Pi
 
Register for this workshop here -- https://forms.gle/mmerpNPj2ArUmKM76
Registration closes at 6:00 pm PT on 05/17/2022

If you want to learn to drive a car, you have to get behind the wheel. Similarly, if you're going to learn Linux, you have to run a Linux computer. Curt will give us a tour, from 10,000 feet, of a Raspberry Pi (an inexpensive, single-board computer, SBC). Then he'll show a viable way to set up a Raspberry Pi without a lot of equipment (e.g., keyboard, monitor, cables, etc.) and space beyond the computer we now use every day. He'll only be using a Raspberry Pi (almost any model would work) and one (for power), maybe two (if a wired network connection is needed), cables. If time allows, he may even install Pi-hole to block many/most pesky ads for all the devices on our home network.
 
After the presentation has been completed, if you are someone that is similarly using a Raspberry Pi as Curt (headless, without extra hardware), please share with us (and the other attendees) what you are doing so we get other ideas of what can be done. And if there's time, we'll welcome other uses of a Raspberry Pi using the extra hardware.
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5/25/22 -- Adding NAS to your Router and The meaning and use of IP addresses and port numbers
 
Register for this workshop here -- https://forms.gle/13FtGLaXuC78v8FD9
Registration closes at 6:00 PM on 05/24/2022
 
This presentation introduces the concept and utility of Network Attached Storage (NAS) for home local area networks (LAN) by connecting any USB drive to the USB port on a home router. This can be any portable storage devices, such as a flash drive, USB solid State Device (SSD), portable hard drive, and storage that requires AC power. You might wonder how storage can be connected to a home LAN and shared instead of connecting to a computer. Just about any router, including a USB socket, can act as the LAN connection for storage. Not all routers include a USB socket, but many current routers do, and some routers even have a second socket for more storage or for connecting a USB printer to the network. This presentation will show an example of a router with a USB socket and the steps for preparing storage to be connected to a router. Also, the presentation shows how to find and use the router-connected NAS using Windows File Explorer, Apple's File app on iPhones and iPads, and the Samsung My Files app for Android devices.
 
After the presentation has been completed, if you are someone that is using a network-attached storage (NAS) device in a similar way as John, please share with us (and the other attendees) what you are doing so we get other ideas of what can be done.

After you register, you will see pop-up registration acknowledgments.