[ale] Happy to subscribe
DJ-Pfulio
DJPfulio at jdpfu.com
Sun Jul 1 07:44:38 EDT 2018
For clarity, most people shouldn't be using unsupported dd-wrt/openwrt
builds that aren't maintained and current. Yes?
On 06/30/2018 10:23 PM, Charles Shapiro wrote:
> The latter. This router is bridging into a network containing nothing
> but student Raspberry Pi s which will be active for a matter of hours.
> It is not connected to the wider internet. I wouldn't use it on a
> production network.
>
> My real problem is that I can't trust Windows to work with a USB to RJ45
> adapter. When I tried an adapter on a random Windows laptop at Decatur
> Makers, it failed to recognize the device without a driver. I am
> reluctant to spend much time on Windows technical support in a Raspberry
> Pi class. I figure that if they can't connect to WiFi, I can
> legitimately throw up my hands and say "Get a Real Computer".
>
> --CHS
>
>
> On Sat, Jun 30, 2018, 13:13 DJ-Pfulio via Ale <ale at ale.org
> <mailto:ale at ale.org>> wrote:
>
> Charles, are you really using wifi router firmware from 2011 still?
> The last version of openwrt that works on that hardware is 10.03.1 ...
> https://archive.openwrt.org/backfire/10.03.1/brcm-2.4/
>
> Or do you compile your own that includes all the remote exploit fixes
> found sense then?
>
> On 06/30/2018 08:42 AM, Charles Shapiro wrote:
> > Hmm. I just recently updated my WRT54GL from CoovaAP to OpenWRT.
> That
> > went pretty ok simple. I dunno about using it as a portable linux
> > device. Seems like the RPi might be more suited to that. At least one
> > of my friends is using one that way now.
> >
> > I have a go-ahead for a Raspberry Pi intro class at Decatur Makers for
> > the fall. DM has a cardboard box with about 70 Raspberry Pi 2 Bs
> in it
> > (the one with 2 USB ports and an HDMI port). They lack SD cards
> and wall
> > warts, but will run the latest 'n' greatest raspbian no problem.
> I've
> > got the hardware and software developed, and I'm in process of taking
> > pictures and making a slide deck. The current plan is to cover three
> > different ways to light an LED from the web: CGI, CGI talking to a
> > daemon, and CherryPy (as an example of a web framework). I'll
> probably
> > be looking for teaching assistants for this when the time gets closer.
> >
> > -- CHS
> >
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