New Satoru Iwata interview; Nintendo Revolution
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New Satoru Iwata interview; Nintendo Revolution
http://www.nintendoplayers.com/article. ... icleID=180
Nintendo doesn't like in-game advertising, will distribute new titles over the virtual console, will allow USB drives for storage, and won't raise the price of new games.
Awesome.
I find the part about distributing new titles interesting; since a Revolution dev kit costs $2000 (less than a PSP dev kit and in the same price range as a DS dev kit), that makes it extremely cheap for small developers to get in to making games and distributing them online.
Nintendo doesn't like in-game advertising, will distribute new titles over the virtual console, will allow USB drives for storage, and won't raise the price of new games.
Awesome.
I find the part about distributing new titles interesting; since a Revolution dev kit costs $2000 (less than a PSP dev kit and in the same price range as a DS dev kit), that makes it extremely cheap for small developers to get in to making games and distributing them online.
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The $50 price thing was expected considering how Nintendo has been talking about games needing to be inexpensive. The real good new from my perspective is the USB compatibility thing, this means that it will be no trouble getting all the storage space you could ever want. Hopefully people will be able to hack it to play music and video as well. My only concern is how Nintendo will prevent piracy of the virtual console titles.
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mmmmm Penguin toast.........Uraniun235 wrote:in the meantime you could try getting your toaster to run linux
I bought a DS the other day. How hard is it to get linux running on there.Praxis wrote:I already have my DS running Linux
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Just get the right equipment and its a breeze.atg wrote: I bought a DS the other day. How hard is it to get linux running on there.
The simplest solution (however, it can not run commercial roms or homebrew over a certain size, but it runs Linux perfectly) is a $25 GBA Movie Player (v2), a compact flash cart of any size, and a $20 PassMe2 or any of the variants.
The GBA Movie Player takes a compact flash cart and goes in the GBA slot. The default firmware only runs in GBA mode and plays movies, but you can put a hacked firmware on it that lets it boot in DS mode, then put Linux on it (putting Linux on is as simple as putting a file and a folder on the cart).
You put the PassMe in to trick it into booting into DS mode from the GBA slot, then put the GBA Movie Player in the bottom slot and turn it on. Bam. Linux.
You may also choose to overwrite the DS's firmware so you can boot in DS mode from the GBA slot with a button combination, but I'm too paranoid to do this. After doing this you can sell the PassMe.
The more expensive, but simpler, solution is to buy for $90 the package with the PassKey 2 (PassMe 2 variant) and GBA Movie Player v3 (also known as the M3 Adapter), which is designed to run DS homebrew and boot in GBA mode for video playback and stuff. Then plug in a CompactFlash cart with the DSLinux file on it, boot, and run. Simple as that.
I went with the M3 route- the M3 is basicly a compact flash adapter like the GBA Movie Player + 32 MB of RAM onboard (since CF cards don't have XIP), so it can run programs of very large size, including commercial roms.
NOTE: NOT illegal roms; a $10 cable lets me back up my GBA games myself. I back up my GBA roms and load them on the M3; legal backups, as GBA cartridges have no encryption. The M3 also lets me use save states.
So far, I've got a movie player, MP3 player, address book, calender, a few homebrew games, a few GBA roms I ripped, and the Mario Kart hack (so I can use the unplayable online tracks while playing online when I put in the Mario Kart game) on my M3. Plus Zelda and Kingdom Hearts II trailers and Dexter's Lab episodes.
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Is NetBSD close enough?Uraniun235 wrote:in the meantime you could try getting your toaster to run linuxPraxis wrote:I'm expecting some sort of DRM.
Anyway, I hope I can get it to run Linux :lol:
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"These deadly rays will be your death!"
- Thor and Akton, Starcrash
"Before man reaches the moon your mail will be delivered within hours from New York to California, to England, to India or to Australia by guided missiles.... We stand on the threshold of rocket mail."
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At this point: because we can!Spanky The Dolphin wrote:The whole Linux on DS thing has just one little bit that confuses me:
Why?
It's only command line.
However, quite a few WiFi hacking tools are being ported, as is a GUI, and once the GUI is completed, that means it turns the DS into a full-fledged PDA.