I would be happy to do the same. I have this software installed on a pi,
but haven't used it. Anything specific you need me to do?

On Sun, Mar 6, 2016 at 6:26 PM Rick Thomas <rbtho...@pobox.com> wrote:

>
> On Mar 5, 2016, at 1:40 PM, Hanno Zulla <a...@hanno.de> wrote:
>
> > Hello,
> >
> > there's a new package in Debian Testing and it took us some time making
> > it build for big-endian hardware.
> >
> > Now that buildd doesn't complain, I'd love to hear from actual users of
> > big-endian hardware if the binaries work for you.
> >
> > It's called "Sonic Pi"
> >
> > https://packages.debian.org/stretch/sonic-pi
> >
> > ...and it's a music synthesizer controlled by code. The software needs a
> > graphical desktop, but it should work on lower-end hardware (its main
> > platform is the Raspberry Pi, but that one is little-endian).
> >
> > There's a built-in tutorial in it, but you can also have a look at this
> >
> > https://gist.github.com/hzulla/cf9165ba15342e5df9b3
> >
> > for a quick start. Also, there's quite a lot of stuff on Youtube about
> it.
> >
> > Would love to hear from you. Does it work? Does a more complicated music
> > code (like "Tilburg 2" in the examples section) work with it?
> >
> > Thanks for testing,
> >
> > Hanno
>
> OK, Hanno, I'm game.  I've got a PowerMac G5 (64-bit, bigendian PowerPC)
> machine running Debian stretch/testing with a custom kernel from Peter
> Saisanas to deal with the NvidiaNvidia graphics card.  With alsaplayer it
> produces good sound thru the on-board speakers.
>
> What would you like me to do by way of testing your program?
>
> Enjoy!
> Rick
>
-- 
Aidan Sciortino
Inventor
Engineer
Dreamer

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