2023-07-01, 09:58 AM
Several solutions:
- if you have access to a Linux computer with a SDcard reader, put the tinypilot SD card on your Linux computer, and you should be able to find a file named "networking.txt" in the ".pypilot" folder of the second partition of the SD card. Just remove it, unmount properly the SD card, put it back into the Raspberry PI and reboot, you should go back to the factory configuration (pypilot Access Point)
- put a HDMI display and a USB keyboard on your tinypilot, reboot, log in (user tc, password pypilot), remove the same file (rm /home/tc/.pypilot/networking.txt), reboot
- you can also rewrite the SD card entirely using the factory image, but you will of course lose all your settings.
- if you have access to a Linux computer with a SDcard reader, put the tinypilot SD card on your Linux computer, and you should be able to find a file named "networking.txt" in the ".pypilot" folder of the second partition of the SD card. Just remove it, unmount properly the SD card, put it back into the Raspberry PI and reboot, you should go back to the factory configuration (pypilot Access Point)
- put a HDMI display and a USB keyboard on your tinypilot, reboot, log in (user tc, password pypilot), remove the same file (rm /home/tc/.pypilot/networking.txt), reboot
- you can also rewrite the SD card entirely using the factory image, but you will of course lose all your settings.