Old Computer Appreciation Thread
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@zering said in Old Computer Appreciation Thread:
@folly I'd tried doing exactly that, it didn't work. I must have done something wrong.
Well done for your great work, as always! You're a true asset to this community.Ok, perhaps I made a mistake.
I will have a look at it later on. -
@folly No you misunderstand me, I tried this months ago, it didn't work then hence what I said about making a mistake.
I'm sure your method works. -
@zering said in Old Computer Appreciation Thread:
@folly No you misunderstand me, I tried this months ago, it didn't work then hence what I said about making a mistake.
I'm sure your method works.Ok thanks !
Indeed I misunderstood then, I was thinking you were talking in the present.
btw, I added some information, the start-script has to be executable otherwise it will not run. Perhaps you made that same mistake, back then ;-) .
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@folly Yup, that is exactly what I didn't do.
I'm only an expert on playing with computers sadly ^^
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@zering said in Old Computer Appreciation Thread:
@folly Yup, that is exactly what I didn't do.
I'm only an expert on playing with computers sadly ^^
You know, you're also a true asset to this community.
Everybody has it's strong points. ^^ -
@zering said in Old Computer Appreciation Thread:
@folly I played through the first one last year, the second one annoyed me though.
The AlephOne engine should also support the homebred Marathon games but I'm not sure that this functionality is available for the Pi, Macintosh emulation might be the only option there.Annoyed you in what way? I haven't played any of them yet, just wondered.
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@Folly Haha thanks for saying that, I suppose you're right, although it's hard to compare to the amount of great stuff that you figure out!
@adambegood The Marathon games are hard, they play much like Doom but you can only save and restore health at specific points which are very rare and scattered in levels so labyrinthine you feel like you're playing Wizardry 1. The first one is fairly well balanced, but the second one is insulting in that regard. There's also no music in the second one, which makes it fairly dry.
On the other hand they are fascinating games, somewhere between Doom and System Shock, and I'd say they were probably an influence for Half-Life.Edit : I've updated the first post to cover @Folly's find with Marathon, and I've updated the DOS section with a method to launch games from ES using .sh and .conf files.
Likewise, if you guys are interested in 'free' games on the Pi, I'd suggest you install uqm, a source port of Star Control II that takes the best of both the PC and 3DO versions and allows you to customize it entirely. The game comes loaded with the module. Great stuff.
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Nice job, adding al the information.
It's really a goldmine ! ^^I read that you inplemented the text "sudo terminal".
As far as I can see it, all the files for marathon community editions can be created as the userpi
.
It seems there is no need to create them asroot
and use the "sudo" command or the "sudo terminal".
For making the .sh file executable, you can do that too as the userpi
.
So you can remove the word "sudo", as for as I know. -
@folly but you do need to get into the terminal to make the .sh file executable don't you?
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Yes indeed, you have to do that, but just as the user
pi
.
So you can just say open the "terminal" instead of open the "sudo terminal".
So it should look like this, in the terminal :pi@raspberrypi:~ $
"sudo" is always used in front of a command if you want to do things as
root
user (administrator).If you say open the "sudo terminal", you open the "sudo terminal" with the command "su".
Then it looks like this after the login :root@raspberrypi:~ $
Then you don't have to use the "sudo" command in front of the commands.
All the commands are then executed as super user / root.Perhaps a bit difficult, do you understand ?
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@folly Not difficult at all, you've explained it well. I understand.
I'll edit now.
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I've been looking into some systems that are readily available on RetroPie Setup but we haven't discussed yet.
Any suggestions of games for the Atari 8 bit computers, the Atari ST, the Dragon 32, the TI99 and TRS80?
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I have got a message from mitu via Github.
It seems mitu has added some of my suggestions in the PC8800 docs.
You can read our conversation about the pull request here :
https://github.com/RetroPie/RetroPie-Docs/pull/41If you have some time, can you take a look at this also ?
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@zering said in Old Computer Appreciation Thread:
I've been looking into some systems that are readily available on RetroPie Setup but we haven't discussed yet.
Any suggestions of games for the Atari 8 bit computers, the Atari ST, the Dragon 32, the TI99 and TRS80?
Atari St, that was also a nice computer.
I hpoe to check games in a week or so. -
@folly I read through the conversation and it's great that some of your contributions were implemented! However I was curious to know why you chose to close the pull request?
There's a lot more we could implement, you've done absolute tons of work on the PC88. -
@zering said in Old Computer Appreciation Thread:
@folly I read through the conversation and it's great that some of your contributions were implemented! However I was curious to know why you chose to close the pull request?
Well, everything seems so simple in github.
But really I was lost in how to keep the fork in sync with the master branche and how to implement the changes that are advised to make.
Basically, I was thinking I could do this, but I found it too difficult to do.
Damn, I still have to quite a lot to learn ;-)There's a lot more we could implement, you've done absolute tons of work on the PC88.
I think I can do the suggestions now on the closed pull request.
This way I hope they can be implemented.
I think It's best to do just 1 at a time. -
@zering said in Old Computer Appreciation Thread:
I've been looking into some systems that are readily available on RetroPie Setup but we haven't discussed yet.
Any suggestions of games for the Atari 8 bit computers, the Atari ST, the Dragon 32, the TI99 and TRS80?
Atari ST is the only one I am familiar with, and almost everything on that was available (and mostly better) on the Amiga.
Found this thread with exclusive games though: https://eab.abime.net/showthread.php?t=37111
and this one about ST versions that were better than their Amiga equivalents: http://forum.classicamiga.com/forum/showthread.php/1072-Atari-ST-games-that-outshone-the-Amiga
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@AdamBeGood That's disappointing about the Atari ST! Thanks for the links.
Found out today you can seriously boost performance for FM Towns by increasing the CPU overclock in the RetroArch menu. I'm running Raiden Densetsu and Tatsujin Ou at full speed with almost no choppiness. Raiden Densetsu is incredibly addictive. -
I had a look again at the PC8800 docs.
I couldn't find changes in the original docs.So I looked at the pull requests, @mitu has the changes, he made, in his fork of the RetroPie-docs here :
https://github.com/cmitu/RetroPie-Docs/blob/master/docs/PC-8800.mdSo we have to look at this doc.
I had a fast look, it looks quite good already.
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@folly said in Old Computer Appreciation Thread:
I had a look again at the PC8800 docs.
I couldn't find changes in the original docs.So I looked at the pull requests, @mitu has the changes, he made, in his fork of the RetroPie-docs here :
https://github.com/cmitu/RetroPie-Docs/blob/master/docs/PC-8800.mdSo we have to look at this doc.
I had a fast look, it looks quite good already.
That looks good to me! So much better than it used to be...
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