I'm Honestly Surprised the Arcade machines wasnt Linux to begin with. There are Tons of Linux Retro-Gaming OSs that started from the RPi Phenomenon Well Done Sir
For years I held onto a really old Windows XP computer to run all my old games from the late '90s and early 2000s. That machine died a few months back, quite literally with a bang, leaving me with just a 2015 desktop iMac and a 2012 Macbook Pro... I'm wondering if by installing a version of Linux I'd be able to run those old games again on the iMac.
I was also 9 in 2000, and I was PC Gaming hard on my father's system with my older brother playing Quake III, Tribes, The Sims, StarCraft Broodwar, and Diablo II
I just installed Ubuntu 24.04 on my old 2012 MacBook Pro too. Glad to say that I am now happy with the new OS in it. I can finally use the command line efficiently after months of it being FUBAR. The old system was practically unusable because homebrew messed up all the CLI stuff on older unsupported versions of MacOS and the GUI was super slow anyway. Ubuntu 24.04 literally breathed new life into my old MacBook.
28:53 Since it took you back to the main menu, it means you lost your connection to the servers. Since your stream continued, that should mean it wasn't your Internet. I'd guess it was one of Capcom's servers choking. It happens from time to time. It's really only a problem if you've been having connection issues and Capcom's server causes you to get yellow-carded.
"No chip damage at all on that?" In SF6, you take chip damage to your drive gauge first. If you're in burnout, you take chip damage to your health bar. You were trying to finish her off with the chip, but you needed to burn her out first.
You can throw someone out of a DI, but timing is tricky. You had meter, though, so super is an option. It's not that easy to fight off hyper-aggressive players with classic controls, but keep at it. You may want to set up something like what the Kim player was doing in training mode and just try a few different things.
It's actually not unusual for bad players to be able to pull off long, complex combos. One of the reasons they're bad and still hanging out in bronze is because they spent all their time practicing combos and not learning the basics of blocking, anti-airing, neutral, etc. The skip the basics and go straight to the flashy stuff.
I bought Linux Journal magazines in 1997-1999 was a good read. Rarely something new in there for me as a Linux user since 1995 and Unix user since 1990. But it was sort of a community support thing buying these. I even remember reading an article on my beloved Alpha systems being used to render water for the movie Titanic. I ran a 21264 Alpha machine initially with Linux myself. When Tru64 Unix became affordable for non-commercial use, I obviously started to run Tru64 and Linux on my Athlon. I miss those days of the 90s.
Maximum Linux was a favorite of many Linux users back then; specially valuable were the articles by Cory Doctorow, interviews to gurus like Mad dog Hall, Linux Torvalds, and the rants by Colonel X. Imagine media published also Maximum PC and Mac Addict, two great magazines with cool content; and yes, I too love the art and aesthetics of even the ads in those mags.
Everything I learned about computers was from the computer magazine section in grocery stores as a kid. I only saw 1 linux magazine (podunk midwest). I got Betrayal at Krondor in a magazine CD. Steam has a fighting games sale fyi.
@@DualWieldingDad I run Bazzite on my HTPC which is primarily used as a 4K gaming console for all my SP, couch-coop and heavy emulation gaming with the wife and friends.
Thanks for the tutorial. I've just got my first raspberry pi and I just love the little thing. This encourages me to look for a beefier machine. If Orange Pi can rum PS2 emulation, it makes it immensely usable.
I've been using Linux daily for 20 years. Love it. Windows ISN'T the most used OS. Linux is. Top 500 Supercomputers on the planet all use *nix. Cloud services like Microsoft Azure are using Linux, Internet servers, firewalls, embedded systems, phones, tablets, console gaming systems, even Apple IOs is based on *BSD unix. Over the last 20 years Linux has taken over almost every niche of computing to the point that only Desktops and specialized proprietary systems DON'T run it.
Good video! - You might want to look into attractmode for a frontend - can be coupled with Skyscraper for metadata scraping , it works really well for arcade machine setups.
Bazzite HTPC edition seems like exactly what you need! It works just like an appliance, has easy gamemode by default, disables the grub popup at the start, has androod support, everything! check it out! its awesome.
How to delete your entire system: log in as root, f.ex. by sudo. Then do rm -fr /. It might work, but later versions of bash doesn't allow this. It is not easy to erase your hard disk or mess up your system, it is about as complicated as doing it on Windows. I switched to partially in 1998 and finally in 2005, because I was angry with Microsoft business practices, the DLL Hell, and I already knew Unix, and i knew the commands. It took some half a year to relearn Windows 7 in 2011, but that was for business practices only. I still run Linux.