Love Raspberry Pi Zeros and I think they're super useful, but it takes a lot of work to get them ready to be integrated into projects. There is a YouTube video (COMING SOON!) that accompanies this write up as well, in case you're a more visual person. We'll do it all from a Windows machine, no extra keyboard or monitor required! When we're done, it'll be on the internet, sharing files over the network, work as a USB thumb drive and more. Open up Advanced IP Scanner and click “Scan” in the upper left hand area of the window.In this Instructable, we'll take a look at my base setup for all Raspberry Pi Zero projects. Now we need to find out the local IP address your router has assigned to the Pi. Establish an SSH Connection to your Raspberry PiĬonnect the Pi to your internet router with an ethernet cable, then plug in the power cord so it boots up. Now you can eject the SD card from your computer and insert it into your Pi. After that, move the file to the top level folder of the SD card (the root partition). Close the text editor, then rename the file to delete the “.txt” extension. The easiest way to do this is to open up a text editor like Notepad and save the blank page as “SSH.txt”. The file should have no extensions like “.txt” or “.doc”. Luckily there’s another way to turn on SSH…Īll you need to do is create an empty file called “SSH” and place it in the root partition of the SD card. However, we’re setting it up headless so we don’t have access to the command prompt yet. ![]() One way to enable it is to access the raspi-config menu and turn it on. SSH was disabled by default in Raspbian versions released after November 2016. ![]() If you’re using a version of Raspbian released after November 2016, there is one extra step:
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