Well, it's so common on the interwebs.I even made a demographic:
Quote from: ccovell on November 04, 2015, 10:44:07 AMWell, it's so common on the interwebs.I even made a demographic: I'm a....vagina?
Quote from: Bonknuts on November 05, 2015, 02:22:17 AMQuote from: ccovell on November 04, 2015, 10:44:07 AMWell, it's so common on the interwebs.I even made a demographic: I'm a....vagina?Vagina was the first thing I thought of when I saw that diagram lol.
I'm a....vagina?
To be honest, I would rather someone came up with a USB CD-ROM interface, than an SD card solution. The biggest problem to playing back games is aging hardware, not the inability to find game media.
Quote from: Trenton_net on November 05, 2015, 05:48:32 AMTo be honest, I would rather someone came up with a USB CD-ROM interface, than an SD card solution. The biggest problem to playing back games is aging hardware, not the inability to find game media.That's an interesting idea. Less difficult too. Add to that, modern CD/DVD drives can read CD-Rs burned at any speeds no problem.
well yes and nothe ADPCM hardware is in the interface unit, not the drive, so any drive replacement would require IFU/CD base/DUO, but not an existing driveunless someone replicates the mapping chip and audio chips
Quote from: thesteve on November 06, 2015, 01:12:43 PMwell yes and nothe ADPCM hardware is in the interface unit, not the drive, so any drive replacement would require IFU/CD base/DUO, but not an existing driveunless someone replicates the mapping chip and audio chipsYes, yes... What I meant was, it would be more work to come up with a CD-mimicking SD card device for a bare PC Engine or TG-16 rather than a CD-capable system. I was using CD unit to refer to the whole package, not specifically the CD drive itself.