crts are one of the most beautiful and “yeah i understand the science of how it works but to my eyes it’s just magic” things in my life alongside slide film
simulate a dark room! that’s the secret of why screenshots on magazine look so good and high saturation.
I once played clock tower (SNES) in a whole dark environment without any lights on a CRT monitor, nearly makes me heart attack.
Oh no need to simulate; but my eyeballs can’t take high contrast when they’re sleep deprived, which they too-frequently are, so I wouldn’t do that.
so comfy…
i’m so close to this setup, just need a rig for the screen arm
Since I got a bedside arm for my phone and started watching stuff on it, I went from seeing something like 25 movies a year to probably 300 or more. Don’t tell David Lynch, it would make him sad for me. I have to take notes because I otherwise forget what I’ve seen, like Sakurai with manga. I accidentally saw The Babysitter twice, and only realized it when I had the same visceral reaction to seeing “Directed by McG” at the end and remembered I’d had that feeling before
Also, Sakurai sleeps in/on a twin?
I got an LG B2 model OLED tv (rip old LCD tv) and uh, the hype is real yall. Infinite blacks are here in a non crt / non-plasma format. I watched the most poorly lit part of that HOTD dragon show and I could actually see everything (with low room lighting). It was dark as a shit still but there is no back light blooming out the details. Unlike my previous LCD I was never like… is that the dragon or a cloud?
Older games look like they are on a “true flat” crt. Film grain looks amazing. To be honest the most improved media so far is the X-Files and Anime LD/VHS rips.
It does 120hz which is pretty nice, maybe Ill finish playing some Flacom pc games.
They are still 1000usd for a 55" but it makes everything attached to it look great. Like its not sexy, It has no pleasing artifacts, like how a plasma kind of glows and softens things, you just see all the shit as is (once you disable all the processing). Unlike my plasma this has a warranty and I don’t have to baby it as much because its not the last one Ill ever realistically own (unless the tech vanishes).
Id take a picture but its just a basic ass black rectangle.
if you have a PC try out a CRT filter out of retroarch with black frame insertion at 4K/120. i find it a very convincing approximation of CRT motion resolution and dithering
also check out https://www.testufo.com/ in general. the clarity is incredible
oh thanks! Thats a cool website. I didn’t know black frame insertion was a thing. Neato
Never knew I needed this so badly until now.
“Game Boy sewing machines”
Software control cart for GBC, GBC connects to sewing machine via link cable and acts as control panel for the sewing machine.
Two major models–second has “docking bay” to hold connected GBC.
First model:
Second model:
With embroidery attachment:
Historical overview and side-by-side view:
I saw one of these at a homeowner’s expo I went to with my dad in 2001?ish and it is definitely the highlight of the show by a lot
Sanni Cart Reader V5
Aka “Open Source Cartridge Reader.” The OSCR is open source code and build instructions for assembling the actual physical reader from open source parts; once they’re all together you have a device that can read from and write to cartridges and devices from various game consoles; you can read and write cartridge game saves, and you can dump game ROMs from cartridges in order to back them up, play them in an emulator, or whatever.
From GitHub - sanni/cartreader: A shield for the Arduino Mega that can back up video game cartridges. :
Supported Systems:
- NES/Famicom/Family Basic
- SNES/Super Famicom (including SF Memory and Satellaview)
- N64 (including Controller Pak and Gameshark)
- Game Boy Color (including GB Memory)
- Game Boy Advance
- Sega Mega Drive/Genesis
- Sega Master System
Supported with adapters:
- Virtual Boy
- Sega Game Gear
- Sega Mark III
- Sega SG-1000
- Sega Cards
- PC engine/TG16
- WonderSwan
- NeoGeo Pocket
- Intellivision
- ColecoVision
- Benesse Pocket Challenge W
- Watara Supervision
- Atari 2600
- Emerson Arcadia 2001
- Fairchild Channel F
- Magnavox Odyssey 2
- Super A’Can
(Don’t do this though:)
Technical stuff
Note that those “Supported with adapters” are adapters defined by users in software ( User-contributed PCBs and adapters · sanni/cartreader · Discussion #354 · GitHub ); it sounds like most of them are designed to make use of the SNES slot on the reader “because it has the most pins mapped to it.” But it also sounds like most or all of them will require that someone builds an actual physical adapter defined by that software, to bridge from one of the OSCR’s slots to the “supported with adapter” cartridge type, and I don’t know that anyone’s actively selling any such adapters, at least not for the V5 reader. So don’t get one planning to dump your NGP collection or whatever just yet, unless you have the means of making a PCB from the available software definitions.
For those of us not into building our own hardware, there are plenty of folks building OSCR V5s and selling them as fully assembled readers on eBay, ready to handle the seven supported systems. I got mine from eBay seller fullcircleembedded, and it https://www.ebay.com/itm/394407205776 even came with a USB power cable and 16 GB SD card (micro w/ adapter), and the card was completely ready to go, with the database text files of cartridge ROM definitions already on it. This build also has the I guess optional Clock Generator daughterboard which the site says is needed for certain SNES and N64 carts.
The OSCR has cart slots on top for the main supported systems, except the GB/GBC/GBA slot, which is on the back. Although the eBay seller showed a silly photo of all the top cart slots occupied at once, you’re actually only supposed to have one cart plugged in at a time when you power the system on ( Overview · sanni/cartreader Wiki · GitHub )–so yeah don’t do like that auction photo. : P
The OSCR is designed so that it doesn’t require a PC for operation, just a USB power source of some kind.
I didn’t clean the cart pins because I’m lazy and anyway I don’t have any isopropyl alcohol on hand. So all I had to do was:
- Plug the USB power cable into the OSCR
- Slot the prepped SD card into the OSCR’s card slot on the left-hand side of the unit’s screen
- Plug the other end of the rather short USB power cable the seller had supplied (USB micro on the OSCR to USB A) into the nearest handy USB port (it was one on my laptop)
- Plug in one of my game carts from eBay
- Set the “3V/5V” switch on the side of the OSCR to the correct voltage position per the per-system cart reading pages on the wiki (3V for N64 and GBA carts, 5V for the others)
- Switch the power switch to On
- Use the light-up control knob/button to navigate the LCD screen menu, which usually just involves selecting the console type, and from there the OSCR is able to identify the game
- Press the knob to confirm and dump the game’s ROM to the SD card
Then you pop the SD card into whatever device has the emulator you want to use, and load the dumped ROM into it just like you would with one from the internet. For most emulators, you can optionally zip the ROM to save a little space or whatever. I’m using Mesen (GB/NES/SNES) and Project64 (N64)–and VisualBoyAdvance-M once my one GBA cart arrives.
I dumped my current tiny cart library: 1 N64 cart, 1 GB cart, 1 NES cart, and six SNES/SFC carts. Each one dumped either instantly (GB Tetris and NES WWF Wrestlemania Challenge) or within seconds (the SNES/SFC games, including a JP Super Game Boy), except for the N64 cart (WCW/nWo Revenge), which took maybe a minute. That ROM is 16 MB.
The N64 cart was the first I tried and the only one that reported an error at the initial identification stage. I dumped it anyway–you can punch in the needed information manually–but then powered off, resocketed the cart–really tight, that N64 socket–powered back up, and then the OSCR ID’d it successfully. With carts the reader is able to ID, it automatically names the dumped ROM with the detected game name, region, and system extension.
The other photos are from the eBay auction; this one is mine:
NES carts for whatever technical reason don’t necessarily ID automatically, so for WWF Wrestlemania Challenge it had me scroll through the alphabetical list of NES/FC games (you can hold the knob in for a few seconds until it flashes to switch to 30x scroll speed) to select it by name and region.
The others all ID’d completely automatically. All the dumped ROMs worked perfectly.
This thing is sick. : DD