Apple’s old airport express was kinda that. You plugged it into the wall and it was a wifi repeater, had a USB port to make your wired printer wireless, and a 3.5mm jack for airplay to speakers. It was about the size of a macbook power brick, but for 2004 you can’t complain.
Along the same lines as the Transcend card is Blue SCSI which is a little raspberry pi based SSD for vintage Macs that lets you FTP into the drive from a modern machine for file transfer.
Those things are ancient, too. It’s annoying that there are no tiny cheap Linux SBC’s like that, which you can straightforwardly buy.
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Apple’s old airport express was kinda that. You plugged it into the wall and it was a wifi repeater, had a USB port to make your wired printer wireless, and a 3.5mm jack for airplay to speakers. It was about the size of a macbook power brick, but for 2004 you can’t complain.
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Technically it runs UNIX…
But there are Wifi plugs you can command via network address.
Tasmota ones, but the esp32(?) was already mentioned. It’s in the greeni wifi plugs, if I recall, and so many others.
Someone posted this further up I remember when they came out but I don’t know much about them
https://feddit.uk/comment/10593066
What about this one? https://vocore.io/
True, I remember those, didn’t realize they were still around. At that point I’d just as soon use a pi zero though.
Luckfox Pico Mini might be you’re looking for. It’s a Linux SBC that costs around 10 USD, in a Teensy/Raspberry Pico or even smaller formfactor.
Good to know about, thanks. The wifi version is bigger but the non wifi version is still interesting.
I mean, there’s the Transcend SD’s…
Along the same lines as the Transcend card is Blue SCSI which is a little raspberry pi based SSD for vintage Macs that lets you FTP into the drive from a modern machine for file transfer.
@solrize I’ve seen CF wifi cards too heh