I might buy the win32 RPi cross compiler pre built ($10) and see if it works: here
edit: The midi bridge is not required. TTYMIDI is an ALSA midi driver for the RPi UART: here
I might buy the win32 RPi cross compiler pre built ($10) and see if it works: here
edit: The midi bridge is not required. TTYMIDI is an ALSA midi driver for the RPi UART: here
I might buy the win32 RPi cross compiler pre built ($10) and see if it works: here
edit: The midi bridge is not required. TTYMIDI is an ALSA midi driver for the RPi UART: here
You could do that. Beware that it runs under CygWin. So you still have to do linux commands. Might be cheaper and more flexible to make a virtual machine with Ubuntu 12.04. There are a lot of tutorials available.
Are you suggesting I use a virtual machine in windows to install Ubantu 12.04 and then use it to cross compile MIOS Studio to RPi?
That’s probably a lot easier than getting Cygwin running. Installing Ubuntu’s about as easy as installing Windows if your hardware is supported, which it will be in the VM.
That’s probably a lot easier than getting Cygwin running. Installing Ubuntu’s about as easy as installing Windows if your hardware is supported, which it will be in the VM.
Thanks for the advice, guys, I’ll look into this…
I have a MIOS Studio feature request:
BTW; the option switches used in command line invocation (I embed them in windows desktop shortcuts) are indispensable to me, they really improve life with MIOS Studio!
Anyhow, my feature request is a “quiet mode” switch that suppresses non essential pop up dialogs such as “Rescan MIDI devices…I have no idea/Understood” and “Batch job complete” etc.
Such pop ups are definitely not helpful for an experienced user (who uses invocation option switches).