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Contents - Raspberry PI Community Projects

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The <strong>Raspberry</strong> Pi is not suited to running Windows due to its hardware, but there are<br />

plenty of Linux Distributions which fit nicely. In addition to this, most Distributions of<br />

Linux are free, however Windows can cost many times the price of the <strong>Raspberry</strong> Pi<br />

itself.<br />

Chances are you already have Linux running in your home without you even knowing it,<br />

since it is commonly used in modern TVs, Freeview and cable boxes to run things and<br />

ensure your recording of Inbetweeners or Prison Break gets done!<br />

For more information about Linux see Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux)<br />

Also see FAQ And Running XXX on the RPi<br />

Basic Debian RPi Setup<br />

When you first turn on your <strong>Raspberry</strong> Pi with it's fresh Debian image on the SD card,<br />

you will likely want to tweak the system settings.<br />

Default login and password<br />

See the Username:Password column of distributions table to access your Pi.<br />

Locale settings<br />

By configuring the locale settings, you can change the language and country settings (e.g.<br />

to get correct sorting behaviour) for much of the software available for the RPi. The<br />

default RPi locale is English/Great Britain ("en_GB").<br />

You can alter this with<br />

sudo dpkg-reconfigure locales<br />

You will get a very long list of possible locales. You can enable/disable a locale by<br />

pressing the spacebar (not Enter), and scroll through the list using the arrow keys or<br />

PgUp/PgDn.<br />

Selecting "All locales" will generate all possible locales, taking a very long time and<br />

using a great deal of space. Select only those you wish to use.<br />

It is highly recommended to stick to the UTF-8 locales, and to leave the en_GB.UTF-8<br />

locale enabled, in addition to any other locales you enable.

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