Thank you @WarmApplePieShrek@lemmy.dbzer0.com Are you sure your link is correct ? I get
This page does not seem to exist…
Thank you @WarmApplePieShrek@lemmy.dbzer0.com Are you sure your link is correct ? I get
This page does not seem to exist…
Thank you all for your input’s ! \
So I have created a table , that I’ll put in my first post.
Feel free to post update like
|brand|model|Price €|GPIO pair|CP|Lan Ports|idle watt|Surface area cm²|Storage ports| WiFi / BT|url|
|Raspberry Pi|Pi 5 B (4GB)|52|12|Quad-core Cortex-A72 (ARM v8) 64-bit SoC @ 1.5GHz.|1x 1GbE|3|47|SD|||
or even without the row header
Thanks @Frederic@beehaw.org
Yes, Nice distro, but unfortunately their RPI respin use systemD 👎
https://forum.mxlinux.org/viewtopic.php?t=85188
Thank you @tasankovasara@sopuli.xyz
Let me re phrase your answer:
… should be available in your distro repository…
indeed I’ve downloaded a couples of thing but nothing had what I was needed, but with the information within those packages I’ve found https://mailfud.org/geoip-legacy and it works like a charms
Thank you all for your input’s !
As I’m not familiar enough with BGP, AS etc…
I think I’ll go for the list generated by
https://github.com/lord-alfred/ipranges
https://github.com/sakib-m/IP-Prefix-List
To start with.
Then I’ll see if it’s possible to gather those IP ranges without relying on third party services…
but that seem unfeasible without be connect to a Internet Exchange Point (IXP) right ?