I have one for the fat DS. I will need to dig out an older router to set up a WEP connection for it.Yeah how about this thing:
Anybody have this thing on their DS or Wii
I still have my ICQ number memorized. I don't even have any phone numbers memorized, but I still remember my ICQ number.
So that white page is gone when I go back with my dreamcast, getting the same old banned error from first post.
Man was not meant to touch the sun Icarus....
.... I also can confirm that while ResetEra doesn't work on the DS web browser, porn still does...
<.<
>.>
It was for science, okay?
But will it be bumped using the Dreamcast browser? Because that's what really matters.If this glorious thread dies in the next couple of weeks, then I hope someone will bump this thread in the year of our Lord two thousand nineteen on the ninth day of the ninth month.
I remember there being a bunch of really cool stick figure fighting animations. Remember when those were big?
I can obviously appreciate the coding effort, but isn't that basically the same thing (on a far more complex/bigger scale by the way) of what many groups did on certain Amiga games, for example?Their crowning achievement was the Skies of Arcadia release. Yes yes, piracy is terrible, but the stuff they did with that release was honestly amazing. See, Skies of Arcadia uses 2 GD-ROMs to their capacity. A GD-ROM is actually 1 gigabyte big, and bigger than the largest CD-ROMs (800-900 Megabytes). This meant that, essentially, skies of Arcadia was uncrackable. But Echelon did it over the course of a year, by reverse engineering the way the game loads data from the GD-ROM drive, disassembly the binary for the game, and locating the exact routines that made this possible.
[...]
Echelon had some cool tunes in their cracktros too. Also, some demo scene effects type stuff in others.
SOA's was rather plain (possibly because they barely managed to get the game to fit) but catchy music.
There were versions of games like Shenmue that removed content (like no voice acting for random NPCs) but SOA was whole on CD!
I can obviously appreciate the coding effort, but isn't that basically the same thing (on a far more complex/bigger scale by the way) of what many groups did on certain Amiga games, for example?
(honest question, I've always been fascinated by this kind of stuff...)
That many people were still using it?I'm apparently very late to this party, but just wanted to add that upon reading your post I not only instantly remembered my ICQ number from 20 years ago, but also the password and logged into the webclient. Greeted by a ton of names/friends I haven't seen in ages and have no idea what they are up to. :(
Oh wow, fair enough, I totally overlooked that factor.while the sh4 is proprietary and not even well understood today.
Or just replace the optical disc drive. Or even better, go the ode wayMan, what a blast from the past.
I wish I still had my Dreamcast. Mine crapped out when the disc drive died. Stopped reading discs. Then again I abused the hell out of it basically playing Soul Calibur and MvC2 for hours upon hours. I probably should buy another one.
Only times i was able to use Netscape Navigator was in the library. Was the (then) best browser to use.
I honestly didn't think the Dreamcast browser still worked in this day and age, i'm surprised to see that it is.