While I wait, what I would _like_ to do, but am slowly manipulating myself into avoiding and replacing with posting to this list, is add example code to my pull request to libusb. I added to libusb's android support so that it works almost out of the box. Previously it required accessory java. https://github.com/libusb/libusb/pull/874
I keep trying to improve that pull request because it hasn't gotten any maintainer comments. Once it looks really, really great, I'd ping a maintainer and such, and eventually start forking the repository if nobody continued to respond, until it got merged or I replaced it. On 2/21/21, Karl <[email protected]> wrote: > Right now I am waiting to try to recreate a very rare github ci crash, > that happened on both of the pull requests I tried to submit. Here's > me trying to log it: https://github.com/xloem/brainflow/pull/6 . You > can see how many xs there are vs checks; it's rare. > > > > On 2/21/21, Karl <[email protected]> wrote: >> Another update is that I have a handful of encrypted messages from >> other people, which I have not decrypted and read yet. Some are >> pretty old. >> >> On 2/21/21, Karl <[email protected]> wrote: >>> Right now I am of two minds. Two ideas continue to press my body to >>> move, and it is very hard to get them to work together. Oh, that's a >>> bit better. >>> >>> I'm working on this wonderful software called brainflow! I made it >>> work on android phones, which is a new thing. Buuuut I haven't gotten >>> it to work for anybody _else_ on android phones yet, mostly because I >>> am having trouble putting the finishing touches on my pull requests. >>> >>> The software is wonderful because it puts different eeg drivers into >>> one repository, which makes it easier for me to contribute work to fix >>> bugs in them etc. More return for investment. It also makes it more >>> likely that any work I contribute will help others. >>> >>> Turns out this wasn't [fiction] in the slightest. >>> >> >
