Thanks for the links Jon, I have been meaning to get one for my child too and 
you’ve inspired me to look into it again!
David 

> On 20 Jun 2020, at 19:04, Jon Malkin <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Good question I didn't time it since I started it and then went off to do 
> other stuff. It's a Pi 3 Model B: 1 GB RAM, 1.2GHz, 64-bit quad core CPU.
> 
> I think tests took closer to 4 minutes? Most of that was HLL. KLL is the next 
> slowest test and I'm pretty sure that took 15s. The kit I ordered is the one 
> from Piper (playpiper.com but it's light on technical details there) and I 
> had a terminal open in the GUI. Not sure how much other stuff the OS was 
> doing in the background (probably not much?) or how much memory other tasks 
> were taking. It's designed primarily as a teaching system for kids, after all.
> 
>   jon
> 
>> On Sat, Jun 20, 2020 at 1:09 AM David Cromberge 
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>> I agree, that’s very cool! 
>> 
>> Out of interest, what are the specs for the raspberry Pi and what was the 
>> compilation time like?
>> 
>>> On 20 Jun 2020, at 07:23, leerho <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Now that is COOL!
>>> 
>>>> On Fri, Jun 19, 2020 at 11:11 PM Jon Malkin <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>> I got a Raspberry Pi-based computer kit for the child. And what's the 
>>>> first thing you do when you find that your (kid's) new toy has easy access 
>>>> to a linux terminal with dev tools? Checkout, build, and test your open 
>>>> source project, of course.
>>>> 
>>>> Not surprising as it's running some gcc 6 suite on linux, but after I got 
>>>> cmake installed everything compiled and tested just fine. So we have now 
>>>> officially and successfully tested our library on a pi!
>>>> 
>>>>   jon
>>> -- 
>>> From my cell phone.

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