<div dir="ltr"><div>I'm well aware XSCE's traditional multi-hour Ansible-based installation process traditionally drove many people Completely And Totally Insane, like Babe Ruth who hit home runs like magic, but whose weight slowed him down as the years wore on...<br><br>So as we transition to a new name (Internet-in-a-Box) and many new community uses (e.g. IIAB was recently installed in medical clinics in the Dominican Republic) I want to experiment with a much faster 1-line installer (some are wisely impatient for base hits instead of home runs ;) and so here is a slimmed-down set of 10 server apps(*) that almost anybody can install it on a Raspberry Pi 3 within about 45 minutes, simply by running:<br></div><div><br> curl <a href="http://download.iiab.io/6.3/rpi/load-lite.txt">http://download.iiab.io/6.3/rpi/load-lite.txt</a> | bash<br><br>With this slimmed-down approach, you can simply fire off the above command, go eat dinner, and return in time to start installing content.<br><br>And as a special bonus: this lightweight install greatly empowers engineers in Haiti who don't have
multi-megabit-per-second connections. They are now able to keep up with our
development process, even with more feeble Internet connections that often cannot sustain 1megabit/second -- so long as we all tighten our belts staying lightweight/agile where we can -- towards embracing very real-time community "fieldback" interactions across cities in the developing world.<br><br></div><div>(*) finally, the 10 server apps I've chosen are listed herein:<br><br> <a href="http://download.iiab.io/6.3/rpi/local_vars_lite.yml">http://download.iiab.io/6.3/rpi/local_vars_lite.yml</a></div><div><br></div><div>REMINDER: install <a href="https://www.raspberrypi.org/downloads/raspbian/">https://www.raspberrypi.org/downloads/raspbian/</a> (either version) onto your Raspberry Pi 3 before you "sudo su -" (to change to root) and then start the curl command above!<br><br>PS do read <a href="http://FAQ.iiab.io">http://FAQ.iiab.io</a> along the way, to get familiar with all the great downloadable content options that are available to you after install. <i>(Particularly if you have a fast connection, and a librarian's instinct, to elegantly assemble the very best open content within your own Internet-in-a-Box. Otherwise you'll need to sideload rich content from a friend's HDD / USB / SD, e.g. ZIM files, KA Lite videos, OpenStreetMap tiles etc. Either way: let us know how it goes, and don't hesitate to post to <a href="http://iiab.io">http://iiab.io</a> any larger/smaller questions!)</i><br></div></div>