Do you know of any guides for this ?
I had just been crashing it, but I've actually corrupted an SD card doing that so its not a good long term solution. After doing some research, I found someone who is making power switches for the Raspberry Pi, which link into some of the GPIO pins to launch a shutdown script so it is halted cleanly. When the system has halted, the switch then cuts power. Haven't soldered mine into my system yet, but its going in as part of this first fit of all the components.
The website he's selling them from is http://mausberrycircuits.com/ if anyone is interested
Has anyone else had issues with the rev 2 model B? Mine seems to be much more power sensitive than the rev 1 board I have and will restart just when plugging in a mouse to it. It also doesn't seem to want to boot with a USB wifi dongle which works perfectly in the rev 1
Had a Pi since they first came out and mines been mostly running Raspbmc, but I decided to get a second one for a project.
Inspired by seeing someone else's project of using it as a pair of AirPlay speakers, I've decided to do the same but make it more portable. Currently how it is setup is that the Pi will boot into Debian and then act as a wireless hotspot so you can connect to it and then stream music from your device to it.
It draws power from a 12000mAh battery pack, which in turn can either be charged via a standard wall socket or also by a solar panel which I've purchased. The solar panel is external to the rest of the setup so I'm using some 2mm plugs to make it easier to attach when outside. The battery pack also has a secondary output socket, which will be connected to a USB-A female port which you can then plug your phone into to also charge it up. The speakers are USB powered so they just draw power from the battery pack.
I tested the battery pack to see how long it would play for without any external charge and it went for 7 hours continuously playing music before cutting out, which doesn't seem to bad. The solar panel charge rate was also tested in a basic fashion and put around 75% of charge into the battery in 5 hours-ish.
Started the soldering tonight but mostly having an issue with cutting a hole in the chosen temporary container (a plastic lunch box).
I'll post some pictures of the monstrosity once I've got it in a more complete state than it currently is!
This is almost exactly what I'm trying to do, minus the portability aspect. How are you doing the streaming, and how are you controlling what is playing?
I'm trying to find a way to run the Pi headlessly, and use it to play Spotify through my speakers, and to be able to control it remotely (through my phone or something). What are you using to control with, if you're not plugging into a TV?
Just a quick note to say anybody running raspbmc I just updated mine to the latest version and they've really made some huge performance improvements (seems they've created a custom "raspbmc" modified version of confluence which is optimised for the pi)... seems to be running smoother and faster so far!