ch00f

joined 1 year ago
[–] ch00f@lemmy.world 1 points 2 hours ago

Copyright law is the only one that matters apparently.

[–] ch00f@lemmy.world 1 points 4 hours ago

Yeah, since it’s exclusively for gaming, I tried Drauger which is allegedly some gamer-based distro. Took an hour to get WiFi working then it hard locked at the login screen after running updates.

Reminded me of my first time trying Linux in 2004.

I’ve been running Ubuntu for a year on my laptop. Might feel brave enough to branch out into something else soon.

[–] ch00f@lemmy.world 52 points 6 hours ago (6 children)

My strategy is to just keep some copyrighted Disney music on my phone and blare it if things get too dicey.

[–] ch00f@lemmy.world 5 points 6 hours ago

I enjoy the joke that most mad scientists are really just mad engineers.

[–] ch00f@lemmy.world 6 points 6 hours ago (3 children)

Built my wife her first gaming PC. Installed Ubuntu. I’m shocked at how easily everything runs.

[–] ch00f@lemmy.world 5 points 23 hours ago

What’s also surprising is that Blue Sky Studios who created the franchise was shut down in 2021.

So pretty shitty that they shut them down just to continue the franchise without them.

[–] ch00f@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Back in college, we used to do a "gallon challenge" every 4th of July for the people staying on campus over the summer. Some of them cheated by taking lactaid.

[–] ch00f@lemmy.world 3 points 4 days ago (1 children)

I think it's really interesting to compare old iPhone ads with current smartphone ads.

iPhone in 2008: You can check the weather, get directions, take photos.

Phone in 2024: If you point your phone at a sign, it'll google stuff about what it sees on the sign. Also, your iPhone will literally leave your hand and fly its way to the Verizon store to replace itself with an iPhone 16 because that's all we got.

[–] ch00f@lemmy.world 5 points 4 days ago

I'm convinced this song and This is Halloween from Nightmare Before Christmas are the same song. So hum that instead.

[–] ch00f@lemmy.world 4 points 5 days ago

Great recs!

Played Stanley, Inside, Limbo, Everything (by David Oreilly?)

I’ll have to check out the rest!

[–] ch00f@lemmy.world 11 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Picked up Journey off Steam. Been meaning to check that out for a decade or so.

 

Just finished 12 Minutes and Indika with my wife. Enjoyed the tight 5-ish hour gameplay with decent not-too-challenging puzzles and great story.

Basically 5-hour date night that’s more engaging than a movie.

Any other games that you can recommend in this category?

 

Given the amount of pull individual influencers have managed to amass over the last decade, it looks like the original 1985 prediction aged better than this 2009 rebuttal.

 

Back in my day, you could usually sip a few mA from a USB2 port without any trouble.

When I try that now, Windows pops up with a “device not recognized” error. I know you can draw up to 150mA before enumeration, but it looks like after some time, Windows will complain that you haven’t enumerated yet.

Is there an easy way to keep from getting this error without having to actually make the device smart?

I’m hoping for something dumb along the lines of USB-PD but facing the other direction. For the record, it has to work on a USB-A port, so USB-C hacks won’t work.

 

Just curious because I don’t see people talk about it a lot.

 

Like why do I feel like I’m supposed to be able to name the seven boroughs? I can’t tell you anything about L.A., Chicago, Boston, etc.

Edit: to clarify: I mean that everyone in America are expected to know NYC. Not just New Yorkers. Obviously everyone should know the layout of where they live.

 

I'm working on a mod kit for a popular item, but my target audience isn't likely to have a soldering iron. The majority of the project connects to an exposed ribbon connector, but I need to short two terminals to force a power supply on.

Any ideas on a method I could provide for people who can't solder? Maybe a strip of copper tape?

 

I dumped the ROM out of a piece of retro-tech and have been working through the code in Ghidra. Unfortunately, I can’t exactly decompile it because I don’t think it was originally written in a higher level language.

For example, the stack is rarely used and most functions either deal entirely in global variables, or binary values are passed back using the carry or other low-level bits. Trying to turn it into C would just make spaghetti code with a different sauce.

So my current plan is to just comment every subroutine as best I can, but that still leaves a few massive lookup tables that should be dropped into a spreadsheet of some sort to add context. Not to mention schematics.

My question is what’s the best way to present all of this? I’d like to open-source the result, so a simple PDF is not ideal. I guess I should make a GitHub project? Are there any good examples or templates I can draw on?

 

Looking to ROM dump just a handful of games, so I’m trying not to spend hundreds on a Sanni or Retrode. I saw this on AliExpress for $15.

I’ve personally had good luck with Alibaba and Aliexpress, but I recognize that this could just straight not work. There’s no documentation, but it claims the game data will show up like files on a USB flash drive.

Anybody know where this design came from?

 

Edit: turns out these are all bootleg and I’m a moron. Only two Zelda games were officially released for GBA.

Just kicked off a return.

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