Just for your future use and understanding.
Raspbian isn't a standard OS for the Pi. It hasn't been for some time.
You are either using RaspberryPi OS Bookworm 32 bit or 64bit
Or RaspberryPi OS Bullseye 32 bit or 64bit.
If using recent releases.
If you say Raspbian implies you are using the 32bit version, as the RPiOS was based on that, which is itself based on Debian. The 64 bit is based directly on Debian, no 'raspbian' involved.
The bookworm/bullseye part is the underlying version you are using.
Like Windows Vista, Windows 7..
Or Windows 10 or Windows 11 as it would be at the moment.
I think the oldest version you could busing it Buster on a Pi4, this is probably 32 bit.
But that's very old and unsupported by anyone now.
Debian Release names
https://www.debian.org/releases/
For more background info.
https://www.tomshardware.com/news/raspb ... r-raspbian
---
But from what you say, looks like it is working.
Excellent.
Raspbian isn't a standard OS for the Pi. It hasn't been for some time.
You are either using RaspberryPi OS Bookworm 32 bit or 64bit
Or RaspberryPi OS Bullseye 32 bit or 64bit.
If using recent releases.
If you say Raspbian implies you are using the 32bit version, as the RPiOS was based on that, which is itself based on Debian. The 64 bit is based directly on Debian, no 'raspbian' involved.
The bookworm/bullseye part is the underlying version you are using.
Like Windows Vista, Windows 7..
Or Windows 10 or Windows 11 as it would be at the moment.
I think the oldest version you could busing it Buster on a Pi4, this is probably 32 bit.
But that's very old and unsupported by anyone now.
Debian Release names
https://www.debian.org/releases/
For more background info.
https://www.tomshardware.com/news/raspb ... r-raspbian
---
But from what you say, looks like it is working.
Excellent.
Statistics: Posted by bensimmo — Thu Jul 11, 2024 1:08 pm