After the first reboot, you will come to the OpenELEC startup wizard. The first boot up will resize you /storage directory to take advantage of the rest of the SD Card space. You can download or update OpenELEC 8.0, not only for the new WeTek and Raspberry Pi platforms, but for also x86 64-bit images for Intel & AMD hardware, WeTek Play & Core TV boxes, all other Raspberry Pi boards, as well as NXP i.MX6 platforms, mostly the boards and devices from SolidRun. Step 3) Insert the SD Card into your Pi and apply power. They also updated some drivers & firmware files for WLAN and DVB, as well as update Nvidia Legacy driver to xf86-video-nvidia-340 (VDPAU only supported now). X11 AMDGPU, ATI (Radeon) and Intel GPU driver driver has been replaced by X11 Modesettings GPU driver. The developers also removed some unused or dropped features such as HFS and HFS+ filesystem, iSCSI, NFS/NBD/iSCSI network boot, and LIRC. Then upgrade the OpenELEC system 'manually' to the latest 3.2 release by extracting the SYSTEM, KERNEL and associated MD5 files from the tar file (use 7zip on Windows, look in the 'target' folder) and copy all 4 files into the Update folder on the Pi, and reboot. and newer packages such as Linux 4.9 and ffmpeg 3.2. 3.0.6) if youre creating a fresh install on a blank SD card. In recent months, I’ve written more about LibreELEC, a fork of OpenELEC, but the latter project is still being worked on, and OpenELEC 8.0 has been released adding builds for WeTek Play 2 & WeTek Hub TV boxes, as well as Raspberry Pi Zero W board, and upgrading to Kodi 17.1.
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