So, I gotta run Slackware 11.0 w/ minimal packages from that (and, that's pretty tight- but doable). This leaves me with only 4GB on the main system disk. And, Limbo does not request write access on external disks. *My* device does not allow integrating an add on Micro SD with the system disk. So (using a RAID), best case scenario is installing a system on an 8GB filesystem. Also, a user is limited to (at most) four disks by Qemu.
Chang limbo emulator screen size install#
So, this leaves a user needing to install a system on disk images that are (at most) 2GB (just one of the many, many completely unnecessary limitations of worthless Android). Android only allows permissions on a FAT32 filesystem. Damn Small Linux runs pretty well, too (but- I couldn't stand using it because it doesn't allow a user to improve the system!) And, Limbo makes what would (basically) be a useless hunk of plastic into a halfway decent system that allows a user to actually make use of the device. Limbo x86 runs Slackware 11.0 really well on top of an Android system for ARM. So- buy one of those and stop trying to be a hacker. You would like to run a brand new Windows system on a brand new x86 desktop that you payed hundreds or thousands of dollars for.
![chang limbo emulator screen size chang limbo emulator screen size](https://emulatorclub.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/FOURwindowsemulator.jpg)
If this is not obvious to you, you are using the WRONG SOLUTION.
![chang limbo emulator screen size chang limbo emulator screen size](https://htechinfo.in/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/limbo8-266x300.jpg)
And (obviously), the most common use of this emulator is going to be running an *older* x86 system (an *operating system*- not a crappy Windows system, which is just a useless toy) on an Android device that is running on top of an ARM based system. Limbo x86 is a port of Qemu x86 for a cruddy Android API (which is basically worthless on its own).