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269

Archive: https://archive.today/DRpgh

From the post:

>The Raspberry Pi has become one of the most beloved platforms for developers, tinkerers, educators, and makers. It powers classroom projects, home labs, robotics experiments, and even production systems in surprising places. But like all Linux-based systems, Raspberry Pis can accumulate vulnerabilities over time—often unnoticed by those using them. At Chainguard, we’ve spent the last few years proving that it’s possible to eliminate vulnerabilities from container images, Linux distros, and open source software supply chains. Now we’re bringing that same expertise to the maker community.

Archive: https://archive.today/DRpgh From the post: >>The Raspberry Pi has become one of the most beloved platforms for developers, tinkerers, educators, and makers. It powers classroom projects, home labs, robotics experiments, and even production systems in surprising places. But like all Linux-based systems, Raspberry Pis can accumulate vulnerabilities over time—often unnoticed by those using them. At Chainguard, we’ve spent the last few years proving that it’s possible to eliminate vulnerabilities from container images, Linux distros, and open source software supply chains. Now we’re bringing that same expertise to the maker community.

(post is archived)

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It’s like they have some pie recipe or something.

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Interesting. This is a good path. Too bad I hardly pie anymore. Raspberry pie that is.