With entrypoint i just meant something to replace mset haxx. Not a completely new exploit. Such a new exploit would hurt the scene more than help, because widespreaded and easy piracy would lower the quality of the games and Nintendo has already enough problems. That's not worth it for just some homebrewers. Homebrew is dying. The security + technology get better and better and there are enough less complex alternatives. So exploits are used for 99% piracy.
I don't support this movement. What we do, are proof of concepts and remain concepts. If homebrew dies, then with a good end (or more that's what i wish, but there are always brainless idiots like Brickway wanting to make money with shady business).
Btw: The tool to build installable apps will be released, if it is ready. It's still in development and buggy.
I respect your opinions but reading that makes me think you don't know what homebrew is even about at all. It comes across as some outdated argument for DRM. Or one of those execs that say PC gaming is dead because of piracy. Completely misguided in my opinion but that's just me being disagreeable
Since I got my first gameboy as a kid I'd always dreamed of more I could do with it, wishing I'd could connect online, send messages with it, whatever. I bought crappy toys like cameras for my GBA just because I wanted more functionality with this, essentially, handheld computer. That was just my generation, smartphones didn't exist, pokemon grabbed my imagination, and I had a hardon for game hardware. That's all homebrew really was for me.
If I can use myself as an example again: I had zero interest in PSP until homebrew came out. Then I went out and bought a console (same for 3DS), because I wanted a system that could do more. I won't lie in that I played a ton of ROMs on it, if homebrew had never happened, I wouldn't have close to 40 legit UMD games for my system that I bought. Homebrew literally put the system in my hand.
If I can use myself as an example again: I had zero interest in PSP until homebrew came out. Then I went out and bought a console (same for 3DS), because I wanted a system that could do more. I won't lie in that I played a ton of ROMs on it, if homebrew had never happened, I wouldn't have close to 40 legit UMD games for my system that I bought. Homebrew literally put the system in my hand.
If Nintendo wanted, they could have implemented homebrew and still protected their software and you and me both would be happy. But, really, they just don't care. They have alot in common with Apple in that they want to have complete control over their customers, which I don't think is warranted. Now Nintendo is in hard times, but it's odd to see so much sympathy for a company that really isn't that noble:
http://www.enoughproject.org/news/intel-hp-rank-highest-conflict-minerals-nintendo-htc-lag-behind aiding slavery
http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/n...o-unfriendly-electronics-company-greenpeace_4 environment harming
http://www.destructoid.com/nintendo-removing-same-sex-relationships-from-3ds-game-253617.phtml homophobic
Anyway this is all offtopic but I hope some atleast see it as a halfway decent show of hand for homebrew. I think the day homebrew dies is the day proprietary hardware dies.