So what was that DSi mode flashcart? only iEvo?

Yes if you have a DSiware flashcart you can play and dump DSiware

Side note: I'm a little bemused at how the word 'backup' is still used as a legality shield, even for digital products that allow you to freely back up and restore the data. Does anyone else think it sad that the word has become synonymous with 'pirate copy'?

Except Nintendo WFC won't be around forever - eventually the network will *die* like many before it, it will be replaced by a better, far superior one that will no longer support petty DSiWare of the past. The word "backup" is apt - it's used in reference to archiving software for future use.Side note: I'm a little bemused at how the word 'backup' is still used as a legality shield, even for digital products that allow you to freely back up and restore the data. Does anyone else think it sad that the word has become synonymous with 'pirate copy'?
This. At the end of the day, if you do have a physical copy of the original you should be free to back it up. Not to back it up and give it to other people freely to encourage piracy, but to have another copy incase yours one gets damaged. I personally use images of my old PS1/PS2 discs because I know that if I break them now, it will be harder to find another copy if I needed to.
Doesn't mean I don't pirate, but I have a pretty even split of legit backups and not so legit backups. I see/know the difference, so I don't judge![]()
Anyway, Are there even any good DSiWare titles that are actually worth the effort in the first place? The only one that looked good to me was Oregon Trail, but I picked up the 3DS copy when I was in the states. Otherwise, none of them at all look overly interesting..
Except Nintendo WFC won't be around forever - eventually the network will *die* like many before it, it will be replaced by a better, far superior one that will no longer support petty DSiWare of the past. The word "backup" is apt - it's used in reference to archiving software for future use.
I'm not even touching the tip of the iceberg here - what about the titles which get pulled *off* of the Network? They become immediately unavailable and you will *not* be refunded for them like in the case of DSiWare-Exploitable titles.
If someone chooses to use illegal backups, that's his business, but don't misinterpret the term. Digital or physical medium, the user has a full right to store backups of his legally purchased software however he/she wants.
This notion irritates me quite often. I own quite a few DSiWare games and people seem to ignore that there ARE quite a few good ones weeded in with the terrible ones (just like the App Store).

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xECUrlnXCqkYes if you have a DSiware flashcart you can play and dump DSiware
The problem with this is that such a thing doesn't exist.
The iEvo never supported DSiWare ROMs.
The term "backup" is defined as a copy of data for use in the case where the original is lost or damaged. The term doesn't apply if the data is copied for any other reason―even if a user backs up his own copy and then makes the data available online, the subsequent copies downloaded/created by other users are not backups (illegal or otherwise). My point was more that we should man up and call things what they are instead of hiding behind terms that make it sound more legitimate. Unless you're looking to play non-transferable DSiWare that you purchased and backed up (something I didn't sense in the OP), the term is "copy" or "illegal copy".Except Nintendo WFC won't be around forever - eventually the network will *die* like many before it, it will be replaced by a better, far superior one that will no longer support petty DSiWare of the past. The word "backup" is apt - it's used in reference to archiving software for future use.
I'm not even touching the tip of the iceberg here - what about the titles which get pulled *off* of the Network? They become immediately unavailable and you will *not* be refunded for them. An example of this could be the case of DSiWare-Exploitable titles.
If someone chooses to use illegal backups, that's his business, but don't misinterpret the term. Digital or physical medium, the user has a full right to store backups of his legally purchased software however he/she wants.
