2017-09-21, 11:03
I can’t seem to find an easy way to image an install directly to USB, but that’s not surprising.
(2017-09-21, 11:03)alexsisk Wrote: I can’t seem to find an easy way to image an install directly to USB, but that’s not surprising.
(2017-09-21, 10:45)fritsch Wrote: I made my own tests in the meantime. For me it looks like this:
- Milhouse 4.11.x based builds: HBR works BUT it fails with 23.976 fps
- Milhouse latest 9.0 version based on 4.13.2 - everything works including refreshrate switching
(2017-09-21, 11:49)alexsisk Wrote: It's still not working properly, with all the settings correct just like before. I'm running from the USB drive that I created with your instructions.
Logfile: https://paste.ubuntu.com/25585195/
(2017-09-20, 21:19)trsqr Wrote: I installed the Windows 10 enterprise evaluation (you can download it for free) on an old hard drive just to do the update (maybe a large USB stick would even work?). A bit of a pain, but certainly faster than waiting Intel/ASRock to do something for it.I actually used "Windows 10 OTG" on an USB-Stick to update the FW.
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/evalcent...enterprise
(2017-09-21, 22:09)Win a 2 Wrote:(2017-09-20, 21:19)trsqr Wrote: I installed the Windows 10 enterprise evaluation (you can download it for free) on an old hard drive just to do the update (maybe a large USB stick would even work?). A bit of a pain, but certainly faster than waiting Intel/ASRock to do something for it.I actually used "Windows 10 OTG" on an USB-Stick to update the FW.
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/evalcent...enterprise
(2017-09-21, 09:07)fritsch Wrote: Can you try: http://fritsch.fruehberger.net/samples/t...-DWEU.m2tsIt doesn't work either. I just tried the following Milhouse build:
LibreELEC-Generic.x86_64-9.0-Milhouse-20170921190007-#0921u-gbe9975d.tar
(2017-09-22, 04:22)Ach!lles Wrote: It doesn't work either. I just tried the following Milhouse build:
Code:LibreELEC-Generic.x86_64-9.0-Milhouse-20170921190007-#0921u-gbe9975d.tar