You can also buy it as a DIY kit, or simply reference the components list and instructions, and use the firmware, drivers, and software shared.
You can also buy it as a DIY kit, or simply reference the components list and instructions, and use the firmware, drivers, and software shared.
Since it’s open source, you could just port it to other software which runs on an iMac, maybe with some help of AI.
Uhh, what?
:-p I was going to type Amiga, but changed my mind in the last second. I think complaining this is Windows only on a hardware community isn’t really necessary. Also, the hardware is open source so you can probably adapt it to work with any system on lots of hardware. That requires some work, but most open source projects do.
I’m with you. It is an open source project and the author is under no obligation to develop it for your preferences.
My preference is Haiku OS. No one loves me.