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Setting up a Bitcoin Wallet on a Raspberry Pi

Setting up a Bitcoin wallet on a Raspberry Pi

Here is the quick and dirty guide to getting your wallet up and running.

Boot to the Desktop

If you are at the command line and cannot get to the desktop type in:
sudo bash
Enter in your password if prompted

Type:
apt-get update and press enter

Type:
startx, press enter, and the desktop will start

Open up an LXTerminal on your Pi.

Type:
sudo apt-get install python-qt4 python-pip and press enter

Press Y when prompted

sudo pip install http://download.electrum.org/3.2.3/Electrum-3.2.3.tar.gz and press enter

The wallet will now install. Once it is installed type:
electrum and press enter

dialog box will appear telling you that a wallet is not found.

Click Create

Copy your wallet generation seed into a safe place and click ok

Type in your wallet generation seed in the verification box and click ok

Accept the default server and press ok

Set the password when prompted

Verify the password

Click Ok

The Password was Updated dialog box will appear. Click Ok

Your Electrum Bitcoin wallet will now show on your desktop

Once you have your wallet open click on the Receive Tab

In the Main Account section, you will see 5 addresses that look similar to this:
1246L8DYTSJ12ti35gXtRvG9Qu4oVCfXrz

That is your bitcoin wallet address. You will use that address to receive your bitcoins.



Thanks for reading

Hardware that I use:
Raspberry Pi 4 (4gb)
https://amzn.to/3q551IO

SanDisk 32GB Ultra microSDHC UHS-I Memory Card with Adapter
https://amzn.to/2Vfvo0y

CanaKit 3.5A Raspberry Pi 4 Power Supply (USB-C)
https://amzn.to/3fNTYPu

CanaKit Raspberry Pi 4 Micro HDMI Cable – 6 Feet
https://amzn.to/33u5hr9

Western Digital 500GB WD_Black SN750 NVMe
https://amzn.to/3nZ5pH4

Plugable USB C to M.2 NVMe Tool-free Enclosure
https://amzn.to/3lflV3L

Running GParted on a Raspberry Pi with Kali Linux

Expanding Your Root Partition with GPARTED

Installing Kali linux onto a MicroSD card can be quick and easy.  The one main drawback is the default image size of Kali for the Raspberry Pi is only 7GB, which fills up quickly.  This guide will walk you through taking your default install, and expanding it to the maximum size available with your hardware.

To expand it:

apt-get update && apt-get upgrade -y

apt-get install gparted -y

gparted

Select the line with the “/” Mount Point

Click Partition at the top

Click Resize

In the Bar graph at the top of the dialog box you will see Yellow/White/Grey which represents used space, free space, and unallocated space.

Between the yellow and grey you can Select the area and Drag the line over to the right to the maximum size

Select Resize

Click the Edit tab at the top

To commit the changes, click Apply All Operations

Your Drive will grow to the maximum size and you are done!



Thanks for reading

Hardware that I use:
Raspberry Pi 4 (4gb)
https://amzn.to/3q551IO

SanDisk 32GB Ultra microSDHC UHS-I Memory Card with Adapter
https://amzn.to/2Vfvo0y

CanaKit 3.5A Raspberry Pi 4 Power Supply (USB-C)
https://amzn.to/3fNTYPu

CanaKit Raspberry Pi 4 Micro HDMI Cable – 6 Feet
https://amzn.to/33u5hr9

Western Digital 500GB WD_Black SN750 NVMe
https://amzn.to/3nZ5pH4

Plugable USB C to M.2 NVMe Tool-free Enclosure
https://amzn.to/3lflV3L