That’s not a bad idea. I can give that a try for sure. I’m guessing the power implications here are minimal as well?
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lemmyreader@lemmy.ml 6 months agoBefore you throw the pi5 out, buy a USB Ethernet adapter ? I have a few of them and they work well with Linux and BSD.
vikingtons@lemmy.world 6 months ago
lemmyreader@lemmy.ml 6 months ago
I’m guessing the power implications here are minimal as well?
That’s an interesting point I didn’t think about.I don’t know and I have no gadget to test that.Once I’ve left the USB Ethernet adapter in a smart phone and forgot to take it out thought I did take the Ethernet cable out. The next day I saw that the phone had used a lot of battery power.I guess the phone kept talking to the adapter and the build in small light.I have one adapter without a light so I can test how much battery that would roughly consume, just out of curiosity.
vikingtons@lemmy.world 6 months ago
No problem at all. I can try to measure this with a socket wattmeter I have lying around.
The power implications aren’t likely to he a deal breaker, but I do love the idea of operating an application server at approx 7W (that said, the same power envelope is also achievable on certain x86-64 home server platforms now).
lemmyreader@lemmy.ml 6 months ago
No problem at all. I can try to measure this with a socket wattmeter I have lying around.
The power implications aren’t likely to he a deal breaker, but I do love the idea of operating an application server at approx 7W (that said, the same power envelope is also achievable on certain x86-64 home server platforms now).
Right.Meanwhile the on-board Ethernet port could become more reliable with newer software or some tweaks ?
Cort@lemmy.world 6 months ago
Yeah from what I’ve seen of Jeff geerling’s testing it can use all of a 2.5g and about 3.5 of a 5gbit adapter
vikingtons@lemmy.world 6 months ago
This sounds promising, thank you for the info