Bad take, for starters US law is not international law. It's potentially against whatever license agreement you've subscribed to depending on where you live in the world but homebrew code that doesn't borrow from someone else's code is completely legal.
Nailed it 100%. Everything was always better off when people stuck to a "Fight Club" mindset and didn't talk about it so openly with guides and tweets. The names were redacted in the DMCA notice that GitHub showed but it's probably a safe bet to say this website was one of the names tossed when...
Agree with both points here. Arcade emus set the standard in the late '90s/early '00s by never including or publicly releasing XOR keys for games that were new and still making a profit, they safely stood behind a general "we don't endorse piracy, go pop a quarter into the machine" stance. You...
Then we would have to deal with CD-ROM bottlenecks and end up with shit video just like the Sega CD and its 1x drive. Byuu made the right choice by going solid state. Where's your Github and emulator again? Where are your Gerber files and BOM for your CD-ROM add-on? It's easy to criticize the...
Seems like you're incapable of actually answering the question that's being asked. You could have chosen something like bandwidth or a real-world usage case that shows a clear advantage over Byuu's design, but instead, you are criticizing the dead. The result doesn't change, it's still made CD...
You're changing goalposts. You said:
The MSU-1 allows for larger ROMs, streaming of CD-quality audio, and video playback. What exactly would be accomplished by using the expansion port?
Nintendo used mappers to expand the graphical capabilities of the NES and enhancement chips for the SNES...
Technically all you have is a license to play those games for as long as you have an active subscription with Nintendo. When your subscription ends so does your license to play. That's not the same as buying a physical copy of those games and owning it like it was decades ago.
E3 has been having problems since the late 90s. Back then it was more about having the best rock party/rave presentations and tons of wasted cash on bands and celebrities so it was no surprise to find out senior high school/freshman college kids were sneaking in. Nintendo caused a mini-riot one...
The stolen Nintendo cartridge code is the major piracy part. It's not just about the games (that's a separate piracy). It makes no sense for people to argue "anti-piracy" but then turn around and install games to their SD cards off the HDD, piracy is piracy.
Running games off HDD in SXOX...
TX was using Nintendo code to spoof the cartridge slot having a game inserted into it whenever you selected a game off the HDD. This is why the Atmos devs won't touch it. Homebrew apps today have HDD support but only as an install source.
I used to have issues with the SD2SP2 not being detected until I tinned one side of the chip's pins with solder. Now it fits a lot better in the slot vs the original loose fit.
There really isn't one best way to run them all. Every method has its own compatibility, speed, and glitches to consider. Some games work better or only work in HOS, others require Lakka.
I'm beefing with a neighbor currently each time I ask him for help with something he makes bs excuses then ignores my calls text but seems to randomly speak when I'm done with the project after doing things to help him
DiGiorno Crispy Pan Pizza tasted pretty dang close to Pizza hut pan pizza, but Im not sure if theyve been discontinued or not. Havent seen them locally for a couple of months now.