Hi again.
Apologies for being rather absent from the forums. I've been trying to lead a more structured life which includes doing more regular things. Besides my six-hour day job, I do daily artwork on my Instagram now and also have real life commitments as well. Even so, I'm going to try and find time to post more often here, even though not many people view this forum anymore besides us and perhaps a few lurkers.
Not much in the way of tech news to report, other than I got down to the big city mall not too long ago. The very same kiosk that sold me the "CoolBaby" NES Classic knockoff is still going strong five years later, continuing to hawk consoles stuffed with hundreds of ROMs, and marked up quite high than what the original AliExpress/Wish/Whatever sold them at. Still, if I have the extra money, I will pick up one of their clones every now and then. The most recent being a rip-off SNES Classic... that has 800 NES Roms... running in a rather kludgy emulator. The games I tried appear to run at full speed, but sound is pitched a bit too low and cuts out for a second at odd intervals. It's also running in 16:9 stretched mode with scaling artifacts, and a smoothing filter that can't be turned off. I have no idea what OS this thing is running, but it's definitely not a NOAC. Video output is 720p and the game menus use animated high-resolution icons and anti-aliased fonts. It could be Linux, but there is no way to bring up any kind of advanced configuration menu. All you have is two really cheap SNES-style controllers that use the 9-pin Atari plugs. Oh, and B and A are reversed on the controller, so good luck playing Mario. I want to get direct capture footage of this clone, but it doesn't play nice with one of my HDMI capture devices. I'll have to try my other one and see if that device will work better. I have two, one that looks like a fat USB drive, and another that looks like an HDMI EZ-Cap with a standard USB cord.
I've also started playing around with that Super Console X I purchased from the same kiosk last fall. It's a rather wonderful little emulation box with a lot of potential. There is a limit as to how recent a console you can emulate as some of the MAME ROMs (especially from the later half of the 90s) do have some slowdown. A lot of older gems like TMNT and NeoGeo run great. Ditto for NES, SNES, etc. I do make regular backups of the SD card to an IMG file on my Linux laptop because SD cards can be very finicky things, even brand name ones. Right now, it's still using that Gigastone card I found last fall not long after I acquired the little emulator box. Unlike their flash drives, I've had better luck with their SD cards and figured it would be more reliable than the generic 64GB card it came with. The original card does appear to be genuine 64GB since I've haven't encountered any file system errors, and the SD card was packed to near capacity with ROMs.
If I have time this weekend, I plan on trying out another retro-focused emulation distribution called Batocera. I will use the generic 64GB card as the guinea pig. The OS the Super Console X came with, EmuElec, works well enough but it could be better in terms of UI navigation and perhaps a potential performance boost with a clean setup rather than the factory one. A build for S905M devices exists, and you just have to provide the ROMs after it's all set up.
One more thing, I changed out the Linux distro on my old Gateway laptop. It's now running OpenSUSE Tumbleweed. The Linux laptop will be the one used for managing the ROM files on the Super Console X SD card. Mac like to place hidden files on any external drive for it's "Spotlight" search feature.
Apologies for being rather absent from the forums. I've been trying to lead a more structured life which includes doing more regular things. Besides my six-hour day job, I do daily artwork on my Instagram now and also have real life commitments as well. Even so, I'm going to try and find time to post more often here, even though not many people view this forum anymore besides us and perhaps a few lurkers.
Not much in the way of tech news to report, other than I got down to the big city mall not too long ago. The very same kiosk that sold me the "CoolBaby" NES Classic knockoff is still going strong five years later, continuing to hawk consoles stuffed with hundreds of ROMs, and marked up quite high than what the original AliExpress/Wish/Whatever sold them at. Still, if I have the extra money, I will pick up one of their clones every now and then. The most recent being a rip-off SNES Classic... that has 800 NES Roms... running in a rather kludgy emulator. The games I tried appear to run at full speed, but sound is pitched a bit too low and cuts out for a second at odd intervals. It's also running in 16:9 stretched mode with scaling artifacts, and a smoothing filter that can't be turned off. I have no idea what OS this thing is running, but it's definitely not a NOAC. Video output is 720p and the game menus use animated high-resolution icons and anti-aliased fonts. It could be Linux, but there is no way to bring up any kind of advanced configuration menu. All you have is two really cheap SNES-style controllers that use the 9-pin Atari plugs. Oh, and B and A are reversed on the controller, so good luck playing Mario. I want to get direct capture footage of this clone, but it doesn't play nice with one of my HDMI capture devices. I'll have to try my other one and see if that device will work better. I have two, one that looks like a fat USB drive, and another that looks like an HDMI EZ-Cap with a standard USB cord.
I've also started playing around with that Super Console X I purchased from the same kiosk last fall. It's a rather wonderful little emulation box with a lot of potential. There is a limit as to how recent a console you can emulate as some of the MAME ROMs (especially from the later half of the 90s) do have some slowdown. A lot of older gems like TMNT and NeoGeo run great. Ditto for NES, SNES, etc. I do make regular backups of the SD card to an IMG file on my Linux laptop because SD cards can be very finicky things, even brand name ones. Right now, it's still using that Gigastone card I found last fall not long after I acquired the little emulator box. Unlike their flash drives, I've had better luck with their SD cards and figured it would be more reliable than the generic 64GB card it came with. The original card does appear to be genuine 64GB since I've haven't encountered any file system errors, and the SD card was packed to near capacity with ROMs.
If I have time this weekend, I plan on trying out another retro-focused emulation distribution called Batocera. I will use the generic 64GB card as the guinea pig. The OS the Super Console X came with, EmuElec, works well enough but it could be better in terms of UI navigation and perhaps a potential performance boost with a clean setup rather than the factory one. A build for S905M devices exists, and you just have to provide the ROMs after it's all set up.
One more thing, I changed out the Linux distro on my old Gateway laptop. It's now running OpenSUSE Tumbleweed. The Linux laptop will be the one used for managing the ROM files on the Super Console X SD card. Mac like to place hidden files on any external drive for it's "Spotlight" search feature.
I love foxes, especially the one in my avatar.