An Image that is really ready to use out of the box
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@dankcushions No way, keep that time travel to yourself. I don't need anyone to be their own grandpa.
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I think the point people are missing is we don't do this for money (and we couldn't legally even if we wanted to as @dankcushions said) If we did we would have already made a million dollars on some shady kickstarter (like many others already have)
We also don't do it for more users. At least I don't. It's just a hobby that I enjoy, and if others happen to want to learn great, if not- there are plenty of other projects out there.
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@BuZz said in An Image that is really ready to use out of the box:
I don't want to do more at the expense of dumbing it down.
I can't thank you guys enough for this. I've been an Apple user first and foremost for 22 years and I've recently had to make the painful decision to move away from their entire ecosystem due to the company's increasingly overzealous objective to turn computers into inflexible appliances. I agree that RetroPie is by no means difficult to use out of the box and it's great to see a project that isn't afraid to be a hands-on experience rather than a hand-holding one.
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@obsidianspider I keep telling my kids- time travel IS possible, you're doing it now, just forwards and at a very slow rate. I use that same philosophy with Retropie, learning a little every day, but always going forwards. Doesn't stop me making stupid mistakes though, just another chance to learn something, both on Linux or in life.
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I understand there are people who really need things dumbed down for them, but I hope RetroPie doesn't start heading in that direction. It's not a product marketed at all, let alone to that kind of demographic.
For people without the capacity or time for something like RetroPie, there exists products like the NES Mini or an iPhone etc..
It's great that RetroPie is free and open. It may take a little work and a little reading to get started, but the payoff is great!
None of us are customers, which creates an environment where we all greatly appreciate the time and work devoted by the developers, rather than expect it.
It's a starting place for something we can make our own and learn from the process. It's something we can collaborate on, compare ideas and share our different end results.
If RetroPie held everybody's hand through the same setup process from beginning to end, everyone would have the same end result, nobody would learn anything, and we wouldn't have the feeling of accomplishment we get when we put in the work using it as a tool to create something for ourselves.
That's how I feel about it at least. -
@cloudlink said in An Image that is really ready to use out of the box:
None of us are customers, which creates an environment where we all greatly appreciate the time and work devoted by the developers, rather than expect it.
Thanks - I think some people don't realise this :-)
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Would it be nice if Retropie did more user friendly things? Sure, why not. Will issues be solved if they're never brought up? No, they won't. Looking at it like that I have no problems.
But look this is free software made by people in their spare time and they just give it away. You're going to have to give your pound of flesh in any transaction. You buy a nes classic you give up money, you get Retropie you need to give up time. If I had paid for this software I'd be annoyed to have to fiddle with it as much as I have, but it's free, and it's kind of fun to learn Linux, so I'm good.
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@JJohnson said in An Image that is really ready to use out of the box:
The online help I found here and elsewhere didn't really give me all that great a step-by-step guide to setting the thing up.
I disagree. In May 2016, I arrived, read the guide and was up and running in under an hour. No need to access a command line unless you wanted to. You Tube provides visual set ups too.
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I really enjoy my Retropie setup, but I knew from the get-go that this is very much for people who like to "get under the hood" and tinker. If you want a hands-free, fool-proof gaming system, there are plenty of commercial options available. With Retropie, you're getting for free some software that has been created by hobbyists with a love for these old games, and not a lot of money or appreciation.
Have you donated to Retropie? I have - if everyone who uses it donated just a couple of bucks, these guys could afford to dedicate a lot more of their time towards improvements.
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I am more of an intermediate user, but I had no major issues getting the retropie stock image working just fine the first time I tried it.
Flash it to your card
Put the card in
First boot happens into emulation station
Connect it your network using a cable or wifi from the setup menu
Shows up just fine as a discoverable network share
Copy roms over to the system you want and reboot
Menus are auto populated and play
doneIf you want more customization then you need to dig a little deeper.
Personally I would donate monthly to the retropie project in a heartbeat if they had a patreon, just like many of us already do to libretro. You guys absolutely deserve it and this project is well worth it.
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@cloudlink My feelings exactly!
When I found RetroPie I loved that it was something that you needed to tinker with to perfect. I'm still not convinced I've managed to perfect everything on mine yet because I've barely touched MAME Emulation on my NES build yet!
It took me back to when I was in college messing with Photoshop to make wallpapers for my PC desktop because the ones I found online were not what I wanted. I found these the other day on my current PC (I loathe to delete my old data and it follows me around) and I've made about 200 of them! Like I ever changed my wallpaper that much!
As you say though, if people want something slicker and easier to use then there's other Emulation options such as the Nes mini or iPhone/Android emulators. I've got a really powerful emulator personally; it's called my PC.
I love RetroPie because it makes this little £35 circuit board thing with flashy lights and bare input pins sticking out into something wonderful. Plus, you can shoehorn it into things and make amazing things happen like building your own Arcade Machine! Things that dreams are made of people. Dreams...
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