Hi Ted

Many thanks for your help.  I bought an electronics kit with the Pi to play 
with.  My son has a classic car, an old Jaguar, which he cossets.  When he 
heard what I was doing he set me the task of producing something he could run 
on a Pi Zero to control the humidity in his garage.  I had to learn Python to 
do it which made me appreciate FoxPro - Python can be a very strange beast at 
times 😊  I've got that part working - at least, it does when he puts the right 
version of Python on his Zero!  I'm now working on getting the output data into 
a SQLite database to drive an analysis program and produce graphical output to 
go on his web server, a Pi 1.  Great fun but frustrating at times.  His next 
project is to attach an infra-red camera which he has bought for £9 - if it 
works I think I will get one.  This project has lead me down so many new and 
fascinating alleys that I am spoilt for choice, there aren't enough hours in 
the day!

Regards

John

John Weller
01380 723235
07976 393631

-----Original Message-----
From: ProfoxTech <profoxtech-boun...@leafe.com> On Behalf Of Ted Roche
Sent: 30 June 2020 14:39
To: profoxt...@leafe.com
Subject: Re: Networking Linux and Windows

Hi, John:

Raspberry Pies are a great project to work on over lockdowns! I've got two 
RaspPis, a Linux server, a Linux laptop (my main machine), 4 windows machines, 
a wired laser printer, a wired inkjet printer and two Android phones sharing 
the wifi and wired network. One RaspPi serves as the local DNS, VPN node and 
file server (with an external USB 1 Tb drive) and PiHole DNS (blocking ads, 
spam and malware). The second RaspPi is breadboarded-up for programming 
experiments: mostly blinking LEDs so far.

Linux machines can share files with a Windows network by running the Samba 
server (https://magpi.raspberrypi.org/articles/samba-file-server and
https://www.raspberrypi.org/documentation/remote-access/samba.md) and can 
consume files that are shared on the Windows network or printers that are 
accessible through a network interface (highly recommended!) or a Windows share.

The best way to start working with a RaspPi is with a keyboard, mouse and 
screen attached, but once you start to get a hang of "The Linux Way," it can be 
run and administered remotely via ssh (PuTTY or the equivalent on
Windows) and/or VNC to access the desktop interface. And/or you cy.an set up a 
web server on the RaspPi and interact with it that way.

So, there's many ways to get connected. Let me know what you are considering 
and I'll try to point you towards resources.


On Tue, Jun 30, 2020 at 5:16 AM John Weller <j...@johnweller.co.uk> wrote:

> I have a small home peer-to-peer network of 3 PCs running Win 10 over 
> WiFi which works most of the time but seems to prefer it when the wind 
> is from the East and there is an ‘R’ in the month 😊.  At the start of 
> lockdown I bought a Raspberry Pi which inspired me to install Ubuntu 
> on a redundant laptop to learn Linux.  Is there a simple way to 
> include these in the network?
>
>
>
> Thanks
>
>
>
> John
>
>
>
> John Weller
>
> 01380 723235
>
> 07976 393631
>
>
>
>
>
> --- StripMime Report -- processed MIME parts --- multipart/alternative
>   text/plain (text body -- kept)
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>
[excessive quoting removed by server]

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