At #minnebar today they expect 1,600 (of the 2,000 people who signed up) to attend this free event. They estimate the cost at $50-60/person. I'm very impressed by this event and the enormous team of volunteers.
At #minnebar today they expect 1,600 (of the 2,000 people who signed up) to attend this free event. They estimate the cost at $50-60/person. I'm very impressed by this event and the enormous team of volunteers.
I'm excited to be named a #twincities city captain for the global @bitsinbio community. I love connecting the #medtech / #healthtech community and the tech community here in the MSP area. Think #medicalalley meets #minnestar. I'll be expanding the Twin Cities #bioinformatics meetup to be Bits-In-Bio events as well. Hope to see you at a future event!
Bits In Bio - https://www.bitsinbio.org/
TC Bioinfo Meetup - https://www.meetup.com/twin-cities-bioinformatics-beers/
Hosting a #minnebar18 session on April 20th, about my rather interesting (in my opinion) journey through the world of Chromebooks
Might have an up and coming tech enthusiast help with live demos:)
I used to avoid Chromebooks, I thought I had no use for them. That is, until a couple years ago, when I managed to put windows on a Chromebook.. From then on, I have: - Helped organizations get more use out of their Chromebooks with Windows and Linux - Through a start-up I work for, [Fyra Labs](https://fyralabs.com), and with the partnership of the [Chrultrabook Project](https://docs.chrultrabook.com/), we have created a tool to make it easier than ever to boot Linux onto a stock firmware Chromebook, and are implementing it into Chromebook images for our distro - Worked with PostmarketOS to port to mt8192/google-hayato - Connected with other Linux distributions in regard to bringing Chromebook support to as many distros as possible - Become the first person to boot an OSTree-based Linux image onto a stock Chromebook, [seen here](https://youtu.be/31apRjM8tAE?si=PwcnYyqVRXfsNGiL) **In this session, I will include:** - My journey with Chromebooks over the years, from how I got started to the topics above - Live demonstration of our tool used to boot Linux on Chromebooks - Demos of custom ROM (corebooted) Windows and Linux Chromebooks, and custom ARM and OSTree-based installs - 'Interesting' (to say the least) ways to use modded ChromeOS devices (Pi-Hole, drawing tablet..) - How you can get involved - Different ways to view non-standard hardware While this may seem like a more technical session, I aim to make a simple, easy to understand session for people of all technical knowledge. To help with this, my little brother will be assisting me with live demos.