The content explains the process of creating a stand for 16 Apple Mac minis to control them remotely, even in case of a system breakdown. The project progressed through three versions, each improving in simplicity, reliability, and usability. The final version of the stand uses servo drives for control, PiKVM for interfacing, and the StarTech UNISLDSHF192 shelf for holding Mac Minis. The setup allows for easy installment/removal of Mac minis and has a well-thought incoming cable management system.
View More KVM rack stand for Mac minis, KVMac16I hacked the Magic Mouse
Thank you all so much! The original post got such a great response it would be rude not to tell you more about the project.…
View More I hacked the Magic MouseMac mini with Power over Ethernet
In Place of a Foreword Below I’ll talk about the project, I think you can replicate it, but I don’t think you’ll want to. Keep…
View More Mac mini with Power over EthernetRaspberry Pi CM4 overclocking experiments
Often there is a whole research behind small tweets. Mine was not aimed more at OC, but at the limits of my Compute Blade Let’s…
View More Raspberry Pi CM4 overclocking experimentsCompute Blade Changelog
Here I will give a history of the Compute Blade’s changes, starting with the concept. About the enclosure (BladeRunner) and cooling (fan units), I will…
View More Compute Blade ChangelogScalable Mac mini stand
With the release of Apple Silicon (M1), software developers had to develop builds for this platform and automated testing of the written code. It is…
View More Scalable Mac mini standRaspberry Pi Server Mark III
I will be pleased if you subscribe to my Instagram (instagram.com/uptime.lab) and Twitter (twitter.com/Merocle). I do not post any spam — only my own projects…
View More Raspberry Pi Server Mark III