So you're saying that everyone who makes any kind of computer or smartphone that can run an emulator is really in the business of software piracy? I guess that means Microsoft, Samsung, Apple and HP are just big old game pirates. Interesting accusation.
My friend created the hardware platform and the firmware to run it. The hardware is hackable, it even has IO pins available to do non-video game projects with. Anyone can load their own software and emulators on the platform, but my friend isn't providing that himself. Odroid isn't either. So no, it's not the way you are portraying it. It's a computing platform in a specific form factor. It does not force anyone to pirate game ROMs any more than a PC does.
So you're saying that everyone who makes any kind of computer or smartphone that can run an emulator is really in the business of software piracy? I guess that means Microsoft, Samsung, Apple and HP are just big old game pirates. Interesting accusation.
My friend created the hardware platform and the firmware to run it. The hardware is hackable, it even has IO pins available to do non-video game projects with. Anyone can load their own software and emulators on the platform, but my friend isn't providing that himself. Odroid isn't either. So no, it's not the way you are portraying it. It's a computing platform in a specific form factor. It does not force anyone to pirate game ROMs any more than a PC does.
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