This resembles the old revision of the DreamDumper64
https://dreamcraftindustries.com/collections/n64
The new revision has an integrated RP2040
This resembles the old revision of the DreamDumper64
https://dreamcraftindustries.com/collections/n64
The new revision has an integrated RP2040
It’s CentOS 7.x
Nice work!
Out of curiosity, what repairs did the CRT need?
Obligatory safety disclaimer for people who want to repair old TVs: Messing with some of those electronics can be very dangerous.
Click the Fabien link, not the OS News one
I don’t have any content blockers. For fun I tried Desktop view, RSS reader, and an archive.is crawl but it looks the same: http://archive.today/8EaKt
Maybe it’s a region thing
Edit: Ohhh click the Fabien link, not the OS News one
Where’s the rest of the article? I only see these the paragraphs:
One of the remarkable characteristics of the Super Nintendo was the ability for game cartridges (cart) to pack more than instructions and assets into ROM chips. If we open and look at the PCBs, we can find inside things like the CIC copy protection chip, SRAM, and even “enhancement processors”.
When I was a child and teenager in the ’90s, the capabilities of the SNES cartridge were a bit of a legend. We’d talk about what certain games would use which additional processors and chips in the cartridge, right or wrong, often boasting about the games we owned, and talking down the games we didn’t. Much of it was probably nonsense, but there’s some good memories there.
We’re decades deep into the internet age now, and all the mysteries of the SNES cartridge can just be looked up on Wikipedia and endless numbers of other websites. The mystery’s all gone, but at least now we can accurately marvel at just how versatile the SNES really was.
Open source or proprietary drivers?
Logged here: https://github.com/aeharding/voyager/issues/610
The developer closed https://github.com/aeharding/voyager/issues/482 because it and related features are being actively discussed as a backend Lemmy feature:
I think this is already logged: https://github.com/aeharding/voyager/issues/91
Some versions of Clip Studio look supported: https://appdb.winehq.org/objectManager.php?sClass=application&iId=15102
But Toon Boom Storyboard isn’t listed (unless it is part of Studio): https://www.winehq.org/search?q=Toon+boom
Running in a Virtual Box Windows VM may be the quickest path to success.
You could also check the symlinks for the device in the sysfs. The word after “drivers” below for a given network interface (eth0 below) is usually the name of the driver (cpsw below):
$ ls -l /sys/class/net/eth0/device/driver
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 0 Aug 9 10:41 /sys/class/net/eth0/device/driver -> ../../../../bus/platform/drivers/cpsw
Or run lsmod
and see if anything jumps out.
Either way, once you find the driver name, run modinfo
to get version and other information about specific drivers.
Edit: formatting
Try humming it in the Google or Sound Hound app. They work pretty well.