having "[...] open source [...]" in your tag line, for a closed source project, is a bit disingenuous.
"Project A has beneficial aspect X, we forked project A's work and removed X, but we just thought we should mention that it used to have aspect X, which is cool!"
> Runs on powerful x86 full-fledged laptops, on single-board-computers like the Raspberry Pi and of course anything in between
> Love Android apps? Great! We are building support into Flint OS.
> Flint OS now works perfectly on most x86 and ARM based hardware platforms. We are particularly interested in making Flint OS run on single-board-computer (SBC) solutions based on ARM architecture, such as the Raspberry Pi, SBCs with RK3288 and RK3399 chips. With this, we breathe new life into the arena for the touch-enabled interactive terminals. Our clients include dual-screen smart POS machines, interactive classroom whiteboards, connected shopping mall wayfinders, smart vending machines and automated digital signages just to name a few. We provide the best user experience with minimal maintenance and development cost.
> Flint OS loves the Raspberry Pi and STEM education. We have created a comprehensive set of JavaScript APIs to interface with the Raspberry Pi hardware and peripherals, providing young users to understand programming and electronics by the most intuitive JavaScript language.
Sounds good. I will try it when it will have support for Android apps in future. I highly doubt that Google will bring Android or ChromeOS for Raspberry Pi.
Is it open source? Or closed source like RemixOS/etc (the other ChromiumOS builds)
Actually it would be great, if a community project provides binary builds (and source in case of modifications) of Chromium (browser) and ChromiumOS. Building the source takes 16+GB ram and several CPU hours. Sadly, Google doesn't provide the builds (binaries).
Out of curiosity, what are the hardware specs of your Chromebook? I'm running GalliumOS on a Lenovo Chromebook 11e and I'm having a bad time. Admittedly, this machine is low spec.
This! As soon as I try to scroll on a site and it overrides my browsers method I'm gone. There's no excuse. It's not necessary and just frustrates users.
"Project A has beneficial aspect X, we forked project A's work and removed X, but we just thought we should mention that it used to have aspect X, which is cool!"
ick.