

I've run Renoise and SunVox after setting up JACK2 with you scripts and recorded electronic jam sessions with OBS Studio, Reaper and the Sony mentioned earlier as network camera. Your builds for hana are the most viable option to test the current mainline status before committing to turning off the beep with a suzyqable and installing to EMMC. The A/B kernel partitions and immutable root remind me of Fedora Silverblue, right now, Fedora doesn't really feel at home on MediaTek cbs: There are other bits of information that helped me familiarize myself with bootable images for chromeos devices, even if they don't look like success stories: I had tried a few times to boot debian with the chromeos kernel as outlined here for example: When I saw the announcement regarding mainline support for powervr I bought a Lenovo Yoga N23 Chromebook (hana).
#Sunvox n900 install
Didn't even install LineageOS after actually using the device. Changed from the N900 to a Sony Xperia, ostensibly to use Sailfish OS. weird flash formats, missing GPU/DRM support and the lack of a stable internet connection were also discouraging. I tried to install mainline Debian with some success, always returned back to stock to make phone calls. Traded the Raspberry Pi for a Nokia N900 somewhere afterwards and fell in love with SunVox. I built VCV Rack using your scripts and I only remember that it took forever to build on the raspberry pi itself. I had dabbled a little in pure data and supercollider and build a MeeBlip synthesizer, but I learned about VCV Rack and it didn't run on my netbook. Hi initially became aware of your work when I was searching for a way to make music using a raspberry pi zero.
