Now go down to “memory_split” and type “256” into the field. Then select the time zone of which you exist within and press enter yet again. Now go down to “change_timezone” and press enter. On the next screen select the same locale and press enter. (“en_GB.UTF-8 UTF-8” is Great Britian and “en_US.UTF-8 UTF-8” is United States). Now use the spacebar to select the locale you want and deselect the ones you do not want. Now you must select the “change_locale” option. This is personal preference as I enabled it but never used it. The next option is for selecting a “ctl alt delete” setting. I then did not make a compose key on the next page and hit “no compose key” and pressed enter. I left them at default and pressed enter. Now you must select the special options for your keyboard. I then found the “English(US)” and hit enter. To find the English layout, I had to go through the “Other” option and press enter. Then you must select the correct keyboard layout. It worked for me and my Apple USB keyboard. I selected the “Generic 105-Key (Intl) PC”. Now select the option that applies to your keyboard and press enter. Do this by select the “configure_keyboard” option and press enter. It will display a message when completed but just press enter when the message come up. Select the “expand_rootfs” option and execute it by pressing enter. Now that it has booted, there should be the Raspi-config menu present. If it doesn’t, you either have a faulty unit or you need to find instructions on how to operate an electrical socket. Then plug the Micro USB into the power port of the Raspberry Pi and then plug the wall charge into the most conveniently placed power outlet. Plug the Ethernet cable from your router into your Pi. Now you grab your Pi and connect it to a video source using a video RCA cable.
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