The internet was extremely bad that day and I had to end the stream early before making any kind of progress. You really didn't miss anything worth seeing.
Yes there are Battlezone possibilities. •Vectrex + ROM only, via James Watt's (Clockwork Robot) "Stramash Zone". Stramash Zone is a great game conversion but is still CPU bound with the processing limitations of the Vectrex •Vectrex + VecFever cart + Atari Arcade ROM. Play much better using the processing power of the VecFever cart along with the Vectrex CPU. Since it's using the Atari arcade ROM closer to the original game play. •Vectrex + PiTrex cart + Atari Arcade ROM. Plays much better using the processing power of the PiTrex cart and none of the Vectrex CPU. Since it's using the Atari arcade ROM closer to the original game play.
heck i used cura slicer and didnt do the updates on the mosfets my printer was just 3d print upgraded so much and was just load filiment and go aside from putting more painters tape on wen needed and use alcohol on it .
i had an a8 and that thing with several tweaks was able to print at a .5 mm resolution on the clearance test print i did though that was before i borked several things on it . the upgrades i did was a full surround cooler for the nozzle x and y belt tensioning prints and gantry bracing well . i also went through and made sure all the steppers were oiled up as well . after the upgrades i could have a conversation around it with out having to raise my voice
This was fun. Currently working on 'silencing' my server too, only with bequiet silent wings fans. I've add 3 more fans over the stock for the case, and am about to explicitly cool two of the six hard-disks with two more, having relocated the two drives to the 5.25 inch bays. (They all fit into the 3.5 in drive bays, but over the summer, a couple of the disks went over 40 degrees C, which while still in specification, is too warm for me! Want the drives to always be below 40.) Using a PWM generator to control the fans that are cooling the disks (rather than the mobo) - at the moment just the two fans bolted to the hard-disks, but will migrate the 3 existing stock fans (which are noisy, and not PWM) over to my PWM system when I've bought three more bequiet fans. Bodging it hard, could really do with a 3D printer and the time to figure all out. Impressed with the designing in python.
I know late to the party, but if you dont put some blanks or drives in the open slots, you will not get an accurate noise or temp floor. Deltas on sound/temp change might be close but might also be way off. I noticed this with R730XDs with open drive slots drive temps climb and cpu temps drop.
A lot of old BBS Door games, simply filtered out *ALL* control chars (EG: Control-C) You could have a small batch script that just keeps re starting the game
I think the best save formatting would be something like (game-)platform-userid, it leaves enough options for future expansion, but I don't know if usernumbers are too long for DOS
The saves are a feature of zork directly. Since this is real hardware I'm not making savestates or anything else that would be interchangeable with other games or platforms.
Shelby if the thing you're tagging already has a UPC / barcode, why go to the trouble of adding a second tag? Take advantage of the barcode which is already there?
Ridiculous they didn't have a 555 chip on it, think of all the extra possibilities that would have added! I always wanted a kit like that, but was given a chemistry set instead :(
using melamine sponges wet just gives you a very good sponge! I never use them dry unless you want an abrasive but when wet it does a great job cleaning a lot of stuff
that kit taught me how to make a super powerful jaming device you leave line 50 unhooked on the frequency shift osolator and wen you press the pattle as you call it it will transmit your voice over the cable band wile knocking out the tv from over 50 feet away !
I got something very similar to this from Tandy (UK version of Radio Shack) for my fifth birthday, only mine worked ;-) I seem to remember making a lot of radios. I used to have a long wire going off to a radiator for ground, or on a screwdriver stuck into a big plant pot! Somehow it always worked.
The Radio Shack XX in 1 kits are what I used. I've always thought they could be used with a Raspberry Pi or similar SOC to have an update for today. The original kits were in a wooden box
absolutely love electronics kits thats how i got started with playing with electronics wen i was 8 years old. it set my life from that day on. ive been playing with electronics for over 41 years now
Thanks for the reminder, I attempted an edit to remove that part in the recording. RU-vid should get it processed and the fixed version available later
i'm surprised that i never knew that these streams were also on youtube. that makes it a lot more convenient, mainly because twitch's vod player suuuuucks.
theres a person selling one of these complete in box. you might want to contact them and see if they are willing to send any scans or files you would need
loading... - DUUUUUDE! Excellent choice playing Patrick Phelan's Night Train Super Famicom Mix from Top Gear 2! ([ahem] Top RACER. Sorry, BBC...) I even started one of my old cassettes I recorded for shiggles as a kid with that one! XD 4:02:18 - The "Biiingo--oh my gosh!"[FEEDBACK] heard 'round the world! XD
Try booting an older Linux "Live CD" one that still supports the older 32 bit intel chips. If it can talk to the network card etc; then you know the hardware is OK. Win95 & 98 are the reason I moved to Linux in the first place. But a Linux boot-cd was often my favourite trick to diagnose HW setup issues