![]() ![]() Tonido allows different computing devices to synchronise files via a Tonido server, without using the public computing "cloud". Tonido stores all user information including login credentials locally, enabling login into Tonido software without the requirement of an internet connection. Data transfer speed cannot exceed that of the slowest link in the data path, including USB 2.0 for USB-connected storage. Data is by default transmitted via Tonido's servers, with no port forwarding required, but can be transmitted without using Tonido's servers by setting up port forwarding. This allows access to files stored on the computer, including music and videos, to any computing device connected to the Internet in possession of login credentials. Once installed on a computer, Tonido software makes that computer's files available remotely via the internet through the web browser or through native mobile apps. Tonido is remote access and home server software for network-attached storage. Backend: C++, GUI: Google Web Toolkit and PHP The Gearhead Toolbox, first opening, and look! Static web sites!Ĭomments? Thoughts? Drop me a line then follow me on Twitter and Facebook.The Gearhead Toolbox: Dashboards and visualizations. ![]() If you’ve missed previous Gearhead Toolbox posts, here you go: I’ll be publishing a review of the ExaGear Desktop for Raspberry Pi in the future if you’ve tested this product yourself, please let me know what you think of it. Which host and guest images are supported depend on the board type and, as of writing, only 32-bit applications are currently supported on Raspberry Pi 3 Model B boards. Perpetual licenses for ExaGear Desktop are priced at $16.45 for the Raspberry Pi Zero and Zero W, $27.45 for the Raspberry Pi 2 Model B and 3 Model B, and $16.45 for all version of the Raspberry Pi 1. This performance hit will also be noticeable but less so with Linux x86 processor-bound games. Several reviewers have managed to get Windows x86 apps running on top of Wine, the x86 Windows API compatibility layer, but report that the performance hit will be significant for processor-bound (versus keyboard-bound) applications. This means you can run closed sources apps such as Skype and LibreOffice quite successfully as well as those x86 games you can’t stand not having on your RPi. Where this has real value is in being able to port over x86 Linux apps that you either can’t or don’t want to recompile for the ARM architecture. Okay, this is an awesome concept: ExaGear Desktop published by Eltechs is a virtual machine that will let you run x86 code on a Raspberry Pi with runs an ARM processor! Let me underline that: A virtual machine that works across processor architectures not just across operating systems. See OPENALPR INSTALL FOR RPI AND UDOO AND TRE AND YUN for detailed instructions on Raspberry Pi installation.ĮxaGear Desktop RPi VM: Running x86 on ARM! states as well as generic European, British, Australian, Singaporean, and Korean plates. Plate0: top 10 results - Processing Time = 58.1879ms. ![]() Here’s an example of the command line version’s text output using the image above: alpr. Either static images or video streams can be used and the output, in either text or JSON format, is the text from the regions of the image or frame where something like a license plate is detected along with an estimated probability of each result. OpenALPR is a free, open source library (the publishers also offer a range of charged-for alternative solutions) written in C++ with bindings in C#, Java, Node.js, Go, and Python, and published under the Affero GPLv3 license. Using a Raspberry Pi for this is a great opportunity to create a low-cost, easily deployed system and OpenALPR is one of the leading ALPR packages you can choose. The uses for ALPR, Automatic License Plate Recognition, cover a wide range from monitoring traffic and locating stolen vehicles, to controlling gates and parking access. RPi License Plate Reader: Halt, who DRIVES there? There’s a lot of potential for this software to be used in IoT and mobile applications. The Tonido Server for Raspberry Pi runs on either Raspbian and Raspbmc and installation is simple. Next, on the clients, you can install Sync Clients (available for Windows, macOS, and Linux) and Mobile Clients (available for iPhone, iPad, Android, Windows Phone, Blackberry, and Blackberry Playbook. Published by CodeLathe, Tonido Server is proprietary, closed source software but it’s also free! You install it on whichever machine is to be the center of your cloud and you get, again for free, a public link such as so that you can access your content via Web browser. ![]()
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