Marks Rpi Cluster continues to run 24/7. The 24 compute nodes are busy doing Einstein BRP4 work as well as the occasional Asteroids@home work units. I prefer the BRP4 work as its somewhat quicker (3 hours) compared to Asteroids (10 hours). I think the Einstein@home work might be more useful as they are looking for Pulsars whereas Asteroids@home are plotting the shapes of asteroids.
Debian have announced they will be releasing their next version of the operating system, code named bookworm, in June. We will have to see how long it takes the Raspberry Pi foundation to upgrade to it, however as I mentioned in my 27th of April post the foundation have already switched to using the 6.1 Linux kernel (Debian will switch to 6.1 with the bookworm release). One difference I have noticed is ntp is no longer available in bookworm, it installs ntpsec instead.
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