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Wrong, the Lord’s measurement is cubits
cryptiod137@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•Thank you to the people providing a counterweight over on the Relooted forumsEnglish
81·2 months agoI remember when bait used to be good.
Honestly though, the game could easily have protags from… Actually like fucking everywhere, ands that’s just the British museum
cryptiod137@lemmy.worldto
Comic Strips@lemmy.world•J. Michael Springman- UNCLE SAM AND FRIENDSEnglish
6·3 months agoDamn I’m looking to dig into that brown star of David
cryptiod137@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•MindsEye Developer Build a Rocket Boy Begins Layoff Process Amid Disastrous Launch, Studio Sources SayEnglish
1·5 months agoIt’s even more funny, or sad really, given that most of these studios are paying people to promote these games, without any of the legally required disclosures of course.
Those incongruously positive opinions disappearing after a few days is totally normal and definitely not because they were only being paid for a 1 week window around the launch of the game.
cryptiod137@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•MindsEye Developer Build a Rocket Boy Begins Layoff Process Amid Disastrous Launch, Studio Sources SayEnglish
3·5 months agoThey cancelled all sponsored streams a short while after launch.
Cancelled one for CohCarnage as it was starting or had just started, he immediately launches another game and doesn’t look back.
cryptiod137@lemmy.worldto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•I have never in my 43 years heard of anyone else with the first name Sigourney.English
8·5 months agoDamn your right
I have met 2 people with it as middle names though
Not an app, but the Kinect had trouble with people of certain shades
Depends, if you’ve done The New War then no
cryptiod137@lemmy.worldto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•Parking fines should be proportional to the value of the vehicleEnglish
5·1 year agoAt least until a couple years ago, California you could drive without a plate for a couple months. I’m not sure how that really worked tbh, like what would happen if you were pulled over ECT.
Now you must get a temp paper plate right as you leave the lot.
A classic character with a lot of nostalgia, and an easy outfit to make
cryptiod137@lemmy.worldto
Comic Strips@lemmy.world•Spider Friend [But a Jape Comics]English
21·1 year agoMates just practicing there stabbing
cryptiod137@lemmy.worldto
[moved to piefed] movies@lemm.ee•‘Hysteria’ Star Bruce Campbell Calls Out Tom Cruise For Doing His Own Stunts: “It’s OK For Stunt Guys To Make Money, Too” | DeciderEnglish
3·1 year agoOn some level, isn’t it very capitalist?
The studio has outlayed dollars from before the start of production, and they don’t get any of that back until distribution.
If a star gets hurt and they can’t shoot, getting returns are delayed.
If that pushes out a quarter or even fiscal year, that could have consequences for them. That assumes that there are any ongoing costs like rented equipment or properties.
Therefore, the most capitalist thing to do is to minimize risk by hiring dime-a-dozen stuntmens to do the stunts.
cryptiod137@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•The official Nintendo Museum appears to be emulating SNES games on a Windows PC, which is slightly embarrassingEnglish
1·1 year agoNES and SNES processers? Those should be simple enough, although I’m not sure it would be 1 to 1 swap. Anything later? No.
You’d have to make the same processor on the same process node. That’s not even just to do transistor size, as that’s just one aspect of a particular companies process. No one has made 350nm MIPS dies since, well, the late 90s or early 2000s. So the equipment likely doesn’t exist anymore. I think they licensing is open now, but otherwise they would also need to relicense the design, which would be something that would be very hypocritical for Nintendo to do.
Sure a hobbyist could swap a dead passive component out, and probably fix a damaged trace on the PCB, that’s where it would stop. I’ve never seen a hobbyist or even small company make a PCB that complex. I know from personal experience that getting a batch of those made would run in the tens or hundreds of thousands. It actually may also need leaded solder, which would violate Japans version of RoHS. I’m not familiar enough with that standard to know if that would be permissable.
If hobbyist do have the capability to recreate the processor, why would a company like Analogue make an FPGA instead for there N64 clone? Think about all the development they put into that instead of trying to do what you’re suggesting is commonplace.
They don’t need to make an IC, the need to make the same IC. There are more powerful chips running smart toasters, and they cost a couple of dollars a piece, but that’s not the original hardware
Your also assuming that expertise and resources lies with the company, and not the staff themselves. I also know from personal experience how big of mistake that can be.
Anything later than an N64 is going to be progressively harder and harder to fix. By the end of the decade they will probably be emulating N64s. And so on and so forth.
The whole point is to not damage original articles, not to damage and then fix them. That’s what’s required of US Museum at least. It will matter more and more as the hardware ages and becomes scarcer.
On the next point, I think your giving the public too much credit. The BSoD is probably the most common failure screen in the world, but how many people would know to equate that with a windows PC and just with any computer?
What percent of the population knows what an emulator or emulation is? 1%? Maybe among people who are visiting the Nintendo museum, probably in the double digits, but not by much. The only embarrassment would be a reddit post, which would get turned into garbage news articles and shorts which everyone but us will forget about 3 seconds later. Basically every person that sees it would just be mad it’s not working when they happened to be there.
It’s is quite literally only there decision what hardware there IP can run on. In every legal way, they are the arbiters of that. Why are we supposed to care what emulator they use? If it’s open source, it’s as much there’s to use as everyone else’s. I wouldn’t run it on Windows certianly, but that is objectively there decision.
They probably have there own way on running NES/SNES games for development for Switch online or the NES classic, so your silly comment about them no longer developing those not only pointless but also probably wrong.
I’ve used mGBA on both my Switch and a PC, I’m not sure why you think that would be so hard. That’s literally made by a hobbyist, for a more modern system, and runs on several other platforms as well.
All emulation is probably (but not 100 certainly) piracy. It depends on how you read the law, but it seems clear to me that you can’t legally transfer software copies without transferring the original. Meaning for it to be legal, you would have to make the copy yourself, and continue owning the original. I say this as someone who fully supports pirating from AAA publishers, including Nintendo.
Can you provide a source for the ripped ROMs? I’ve been well actually’d on that before, now in both directions, but I can’t find an actual source.
These are in the most certain terms possible “rules for thee and not for me” but it’s there IP, and they get to set those rules. I wouldn’t describe there rights they fight tooth and nail for as hypocritical.
Funnily enough, I’m guessing the whole reason they are emulating NES/SNES is because they were having reliability issues.They probably picked the simplest thing they could get working on short notice.
cryptiod137@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•The official Nintendo Museum appears to be emulating SNES games on a Windows PC, which is slightly embarrassingEnglish
12·1 year agoOr they could just, I don’t know, not burn out console after console running them constantly so they don’t have to spend exuberantly. That’s if the they can even produce that process node somehow. If not, making a new fab would cost 10s of millions, to produce old and completely antiquated hardware that they can already emulate on there current hardware.
What do think Nintendo does there development on? You think they run the unity editor on the Switch? They have probably used windows emulators for development since the Gamecube, and they absolutely have there own versions. Which open source emulators are they trying shut down? Something from this decade? If you mean Switch emulators, that’s just piracy, which I’m all for, but it’s not a exactly a moral high ground.
I thought they had included ripped ROMs, someone mentioned in another thread that were packaging the ROMs the same way. I’m not sure if that means the used the same tools or got to same result another way, buts it’s only a way of packaging ROMs.
It’s there IP, they can choose what’s allowed to be done with it. If they want to emulate it, they can. If they want it to only ever play on a N64DD, then thats also up to them. If they benefit from open source emulators, which I mostly doubt, then they as the fault on the emulator developer for being open source. Close it down, make Nintendo license it if you think it’s benefiting them unfairly.
I assure you they are currently runnng there in-development Switch2 games on in an emulated environment as we speak.
cryptiod137@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•The official Nintendo Museum appears to be emulating SNES games on a Windows PC, which is slightly embarrassingEnglish
1·1 year agoThat would just be wasteful, and wouldn’t really be the same thing? Analogue already makes N64 FPGAs make things that are almost N64s, and Nintendo doesn’t seem to care.
Your forgetting that Nintendo emulates there own games all the time, literally since the GameCube.
There argument has never been about what they can do, it’s about what you can do. Now they are wrong under US law, but it’s not like it’s hard to go find ROMs of these games, they aren’t even on torrents or shady websites, you can download them directly.
cryptiod137@lemmy.worldto
Anime@ani.social•Lore Of Disturbing Human-Pokémon Relationships & Hybrid Offspring Come To Light In Recent Game Freak LeaksEnglish
3·1 year agoI see what your saying, but none of it that I’ve read so far hits my AI button. Like it doesn’t sound like AI, it’s just sounds like something you’d write in a notebook and forget about.
I could see some of it being fake just to stir up attention, yeah.
cryptiod137@lemmy.worldto
Anime@ani.social•Lore Of Disturbing Human-Pokémon Relationships & Hybrid Offspring Come To Light In Recent Game Freak LeaksEnglish
41·1 year agoSome of the leaks are 100% real, like the source code for BW and HGSS and the personal info of various employees.
cryptiod137@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•The official Nintendo Museum appears to be emulating SNES games on a Windows PC, which is slightly embarrassingEnglish
32·1 year agoThat’s not the point of it though. Not about whether you could fix or maintain it when operating it, it’s about not operating it if presents a notable risk of failure. The Smithsonian doesn’t start grinding cornmeal in a bowl from the Mississippians. The Connecticut Museum doesn’t take it’s colt rifles out the range for target practice. These organizations would use a replica to demonstrate what it was like, as opposed to risking damaging an original article.
Thats also not even necessary true either. While they may have invented there various consoles, at some point it will be nearly impossible to acquire replacement parts. They don’t manufacture the ICs or mainboards or the various discreet components. So if there’s no old stock, how would they “fix” a broken N64 (or later) console? It might be theoretically possible to fab a NEC VR4300 to replace a dead one, but probably cost hundreds of thousands, and it wouldn’t be broken anyway if you hadn’t left if running 16 hours a day so some sweaty tourists could play on real hardware.
And why would they? It would cost more, be more work, and have less reliable results than using a completely replacable computer running an emulator. The entire consumer facing side of the equation is worse if they run the games on the actual hardware, as long as the consumer doesn’t see it, which is really down to how they design the exhibit.
Do you think the public is understanding enough to accept that “The NES is really old and it broke so you can’t play super mario bros today”, when it’s the only day you are gonna be there? Temper tantrum, bad reviews, loss of face. From what I understand, Japan actually cares about all that, so Nintendo probably does as well.



It was brought in for questioning… On a cold case