HOWTO: Boot your Raspberry Pi into a fullscreen browser kiosk | Wired Watershed

Origen: HOWTO: Boot your Raspberry Pi into a fullscreen browser kiosk | Wired Watershed

Software for the Project:

The CanaKit comes with a pre-loaded SD card that includes the same version of Debian Wheezy that I used for this project.  However, in an effort to get a little more speed out of the system, I used the 95MB/s Sandisk extreme listed above. It seemed to help, but I did not bench mark it beyond observation.

Anyway, lets get down to building a Raspberry Pi Web Kiosk.

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Asterisk con WEBRTC (obsoleto)

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Primero los paquetes necesarios


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Como convertir un PEM a PPK para que putty entre a un servidor linux

Primero ejecutamos All Programs > PuTTY > PuTTYgen

Under Type of key to generate, select SSH-2 RSA.

  1. Click Load. By default, PuTTYgen displays only files with the extension .ppk. To locate your .pem file, select the option to display files of all types.
    Select all file types
  2. Select your .pem file for the key pair that you specified when you launch your instance, and then click Open. Click OK to dismiss the confirmation dialog box.
  3. Click Save private key to save the key in the format that PuTTY can use. PuTTYgen displays a warning about saving the key without a passphrase. Click Yes.

    Note

    A passphrase on a private key is an extra layer of protection, so even if your private key is discovered, it can’t be used without the passphrase. The downside to using a passphrase is that it makes automation harder because human intervention is needed to log on to an instance, or copy files to an instance.

  4. Specify the same name for the key that you used for the key pair (for example, my-key-pair). PuTTY automatically adds the .ppk file extension.