I’m not using the official power supply, but instead a Macbook USB-C power supply. I think it’s rated at 65W (maybe only 30W?).
I haven’t noticed any issues, but I found out that you can check by running the following:
vcgencmd get_throttled
If you see the following the you may have voltage issues:
throttled=0x50005
When I ran the command the output was simply:
throttled=0x0
Hopefully that means I’m in the clear with my power supply.
Source: https://pimylifeup.com/raspberry-pi-low-voltage-warning/
]]>Downloaded:
https://repo.protonvpn.com/debian/dists/stable/main/binary-all/protonvpn-stable-release_1.0.3_all.deb
I just installed the .deb
with the GUI installer. Then proceeded to:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install protonvpn-cli
From there, it’s a matter of logging in:
protonvpn-cli login <username>
Enter. Then provide the password, when prompted.
I saw a GUI keychain manager popup, but I just cancelled. I guess that’s the OS offering to store the authentication info?
One the authentication is successful, to connect:
protonvpn-cli c
After choosing my server, unfortunately, I was met with:
An unknown error has occurred. Please ensure that you have internet connectivity. If the issue persists, please contact support.
The tutorial above also mentioned this. In their experience, rebooting the system was enough to resolve the issue. But I’m not clear if that’s for Ubuntu or Rasberry Pi.
I have yet to try the reboot, so I have everything installed and in place, but don’t yet have a working VPN connection.
]]>Plugging in the drive showed that the system and file manager couldn’t deal with apfs.
I’m mainly wanted to view the files. A quick google and I came across a forum posts suggesting to use apfs-fuse
: