For a long time I've wanted to run some form of "cluster" at home. Given I make less than $500 million in annual revenue Cray won't return my calls and I'd rather suck eggs than deal with IBM, so I eventually had to set my sights a little lower. So for about 5 years now I've wanted a Raspberry Pi cluster. I had my eye set on a [PicoCluster](https://www.picocluster.com/) five node kit, but with the Raspberry Pi 3B+ still being limited, I wasn't super convinced. That changed after the Raspberry Pi 4B came out and had more than enough power to replace a few ancient and crumbling pieces of technology I owned that were limping along hosting some things for me. After a tax error in my favour I finally made the decision and last week the components finished arriving and I got about to setting it up. ![Five Raspberry Pi model 4B 8GB boxes stacked on top of each other, resting on an A3 cutting mat.](/img/2022-09-19-raspberry-pis.jpg) The boards I was familiar with. I currently have a Raspberry Pi 4B 4GB running [OSMC](https://osmc.tv/) (based on Kodi) attached to my TV acting as a media server. It's connected via a file share to our NAS so we can watch movies and TV shows on the TV or stream them to our own devices. I spent a few quiet hours on a weekend afternoon assembling the kit, enjoying the tactile feel of screws and panels, wiring up power supplies and ensuring everything was in the right place. I think part of that was a necessary element for me - an afternoon with no responsibilities where I could just follow some simple instructions, putting together a beautiful piece of tech. And what a beautiful piece it is. ![An assembled PicoCluster Raspberry Pi cluster computer. It consists of transparent acrylic panels housing a fan on one side, a network switch on the other, and five Raspberry Pi computer stacked on top of each other with spacers. A solid looking green rocker power switch on the front sits above a single HDMI port.](/img/2022-09-19-picocluster.jpg) While not as luminous or fancy as some projects out there, the acrylic panels feel like a nice throwback to the turn of the millennium design, while still being functional all through. I've got a long weekend coming up, during which I plan to experiment with the operating system, software, and application side of this cluster, I'm sure I'll have more posts after my first adventures.