A microSD card (minimum 8GB, and cards up to 32GB seem to work fine). In addition to the board itself, you will need: This tutorial will also work fine on the first generation model (in fact, this is what I am using), but if you don’t have one yet, you will be better off buying the latest Raspberry Pi 2 Model B from one of the distributors. In February 2015, the second generation Raspberry Pi was released with more memory and CPU power. This is great for setting up your own remote digital workspace, or simply to have control over the hardware you use for development. In this article, I’m going to guide you through the process of setting it up as a home development server and deploying a full-stack JavaScript application that you can access from outside your network. The Raspberry Pi is a little computer that you can get for as low as US $35 and on which you can run many different types of software and build many different projects. How to Turn Your Raspberry Pi Into a Development Server
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