Thanks for the reminder, I attempted an edit to remove that part in the recording. TH-cam should get it processed and the fixed version available later
i'm surprised that i never knew that these streams were also on youtube. that makes it a lot more convenient, mainly because twitch's vod player suuuuucks.
theres a person selling one of these complete in box. you might want to contact them and see if they are willing to send any scans or files you would need
loading... - DUUUUUDE! Excellent choice playing Patrick Phelan's Night Train Super Famicom Mix from Top Gear 2! ([ahem] Top RACER. Sorry, BBC...) I even started one of my old cassettes I recorded for shiggles as a kid with that one! XD 4:02:18 - The "Biiingo--oh my gosh!"[FEEDBACK] heard 'round the world! XD
Try booting an older Linux "Live CD" one that still supports the older 32 bit intel chips. If it can talk to the network card etc; then you know the hardware is OK. Win95 & 98 are the reason I moved to Linux in the first place. But a Linux boot-cd was often my favourite trick to diagnose HW setup issues
Good livestream. Weird how switching camera sometimes triggers the keyframe issue or whatever it is. At the end your voice was several seconds out of sync but the printer sound was in sync... 🤔
@@skilletpan5674 Yep. Only with 86Box can you specifically emulate an Acer V30 motherboard and an AcerMagic S20 sound card, just to name 2 specific examples.
hu the NV gpu enabled laptop should have a igpu and it is using the MESA driver for power saving for daily use by default if you have it setup right and would likely preform better then Nouveau.
Ah I see KDE is back in top form, meaning that the edit mode is completely borked as usual. Several months ago I accidentally added a third panel in Plasma 5.27 and then could not remove it because Plasma Shell would crash every time I attempted it. I ended up nuking a lot of KDE-related settings in my home folder in order to end up with a usable desktop again 😂
Okay... I was mainly curious how you were gonna set up that UBER Server MoBo you were gifted in the previous Mail Call vid. The first 12 minutes knocked me the [redacted] OUT XD
...On second thought, this Comedy of Errors (YES, I'M CALLING IT THAT!) caused a few laugh cramps at times! Hopefully the follow-up will be more straightforward! :D
"I've never seen a CAD package designed for 8088" FYI, I used Tango-Schematic and Tango-PCB (version 1.1 IIRC) back in 1984 on IBM XTs. I can't seem to find that version on any of the archive sites though.
I have two questions about the printing stuff: 1. If we would ignore the maximum DPI of the printer for once and buy cheap printer paper from a store, what is the maximum DPI of that paper ? 2. If you need 300-400 DPI, todays Laserprinters can print in higher DPI than that, have you tried to print something on such a laser printer from a friend ?
The problem with most consumer grade printers that I've tested is that they can put down ink at 300-1200 DPI but not consistently. The position of the dots wobbles all over. I tried to use consumer grade printers for this in pt2 and pt3: th-cam.com/video/CFm1-3QHHf4/w-d-xo.html Thermal label printers seem to be the key because they are made for small barcodes. But thermal isn't a good long term solution. And my overall goals are to get real cards produced that are as good as the originals.
This is fascinating, I had no idea this concept has been essentially productized. Seems potentially useful for all sorts of test scenarios if it can performs in an acceptable way -- I worked on a project with a deterministic engine and we'd capture replay files with bug reports for at least just the engine, and that was tremendously useful already. Being able to do that in a general way without modifying the underlying software -- head asplode I'm thinking the single thread limitation is probably pretty nearly intractable, and also probably why nobody has done this in a big way yet, but hmmmm.
FYI the PET has a hidden RIFA - it is literally molded IN TO the IEC socket. (the socket on the PET is not just a simple receptacle, it is an actual module that contains a hidden RIFA.) You would either have to dremel the thing open in order to remove the RIFA, or (the easier option) just replace it with a plain/normal IEC socket. (the mounting hole pattern is identical) The same thing applies to Commodore PET-style disk drive chassis as well.
Oh Shelby, sweet summer child, technical designs generally aren't copyrightable even today -- when people copied the original Apple ROMs it was a genuine question whether software was more like a circuit design (or math, which was and is also not copyrightable) or more like a short story. In the same era, Haynes etc. were publishing third party repair manuals for cars with schematics. As long as they drafted it themselves and didn't just copy the literal artwork, selling properly reverse engineered schematics was and still is perfectly legal. Apple might get after you if they thought you were sharing a trade secret you got your hands on improperly, like from a contractor who's under NDA, but you really could sell iPhone schematics you reverse engineered straight from the actual device. Consider how terrible it would be if the first person to design a switching converter held a 100+ year copyright to that circuit design, and nobody else could make a schematic for it, or implement it for that matter, because that's really just a transformation of the schematic...
Used Pet to print out 16 bit values to draw a circle bars to simulate a Radar PPI sweep on a CRT monitor. Computer was a Univac 16 bit minicomputer. I don't remember if sin/cosine functions were in Comodore Basic or it was an add on.
Hi Shelby. I watch your content from Argentina. I really enjoy your content, although I lack the technical knowledge to understand most of it. Still, I really enjoy it. I have an ASUS P5N32-E-SLI mobo, and I would like to upload pictures of it to Caps Wiki. I just wanted to know if you think it's worth it, since it's an old system. Also, I've installed a serial port in my ASUS Prime A320M-K. Most chances are that I never get to use it, but still I like the feeling of having a relatively modern system with legacy ports. Cheers!
So I also own the Crew (I don't remember directly buying it, probably got it free somehow), looks like I played it one time in 2016, got one achievement, and never touched it again.
the debugging gba code... its nearly impossible to just stop the game where you want it to... you will almost always will "pause" in the middle of a vblank routine.
Honeywell / Bull made an Z80 work-alike that ran CPM out of AM2901 bitslice units. CPU card was 2'x1'. Whole system fit in a clamshell case that was a lot like a squared-off life-raft housing. With obligatory front panel switch/lights. Don't have it anymore, sadly.
Yeaaaah, the iPod Shuffle 2g doesn't have a touchwheel. It's just 4 tact switches under a plastic ring. KDE Plasma 6 on Wayland can change scaling on the fly, also. And, hey, this SD card might seem excruciatingly slow, but I just backed up an SD card with *read speeds* of <1MBps. It took *13.5 hours* to read 64 GB.
I have a similar Pixma printer at home and it's a terrible piece of crap, it runs out of ink quickly and it's terribly expensive to constantly refill, I bought a simple black and white HP laser printer instead, and it's good for 99% of things
I wonder if it can read from a photographic negative. The Applied Science video about making photolithography masks from a few years ago might be relevant here, and maybe an opportunity for a collaboration.
For all VOD watchers, The Static attacks from 2:11:35 to 2:12:05 Almost made me crash my virtual semi truck :P
Thanks for the reminder, I attempted an edit to remove that part in the recording. TH-cam should get it processed and the fixed version available later
Intel Quicksync is pretty good at video transcoding, from what I've heard.
All going on in this stream, and it worked out in the end, fun times!
i'm surprised that i never knew that these streams were also on youtube. that makes it a lot more convenient, mainly because twitch's vod player suuuuucks.
theres a person selling one of these complete in box. you might want to contact them and see if they are willing to send any scans or files you would need
loading... - DUUUUUDE! Excellent choice playing Patrick Phelan's Night Train Super Famicom Mix from Top Gear 2! ([ahem] Top RACER. Sorry, BBC...) I even started one of my old cassettes I recorded for shiggles as a kid with that one! XD 4:02:18 - The "Biiingo--oh my gosh!"[FEEDBACK] heard 'round the world! XD
Awww what a shame.
Try booting an older Linux "Live CD" one that still supports the older 32 bit intel chips. If it can talk to the network card etc; then you know the hardware is OK. Win95 & 98 are the reason I moved to Linux in the first place. But a Linux boot-cd was often my favourite trick to diagnose HW setup issues
Good livestream. Weird how switching camera sometimes triggers the keyframe issue or whatever it is. At the end your voice was several seconds out of sync but the printer sound was in sync... 🤔
That computer is absolutely cursed 😂 VIA VP2 chipset with its buggy USB controller and an early Realtek PCI NIC -- what a lovely combo 😅
"Your network is not complete. Do you want to continue?" "uhhhh..................... yes?????" hahaha 2:36:25
Awesome to see the VFX1 working, nice job!
It is so simple to setup network on 98. Tick file and print sharing and select only File. Then you get the login prompt. This video is retarded.
"we're exactly at the same point as where we started...!" @3:58:00
Huh. Never expected I'd get my 5 seconds of fame by way of an 86Box bug report I submitted being shown in one of your streams.
Why use it over dosbox? It looks like it supports a bunch of "real" hardware? is that why?
@@skilletpan5674 Yep. Only with 86Box can you specifically emulate an Acer V30 motherboard and an AcerMagic S20 sound card, just to name 2 specific examples.
hu the NV gpu enabled laptop should have a igpu and it is using the MESA driver for power saving for daily use by default if you have it setup right and would likely preform better then Nouveau.
I dunno dude. 4 hours on average for 5 people....
5 people?
it isnt the caps? its always the caps in these cases...
will it not accept V4? the 2690 V4 surely thats superior
Haswell-EP and Broadwell-E need an LGA2011v3 motherboard because they support only DDR4, while earlier LGA2011 motherboards support only DDR3
@@yeoldestuff so this is a ddr3 board?
@@danthompsett2894 it should be if it works with a v2 xeon
Great livestream. New mic is excellent!
Ah I see KDE is back in top form, meaning that the edit mode is completely borked as usual. Several months ago I accidentally added a third panel in Plasma 5.27 and then could not remove it because Plasma Shell would crash every time I attempted it. I ended up nuking a lot of KDE-related settings in my home folder in order to end up with a usable desktop again 😂
How are you in the USA with such rubbish internet?
Okay... I was mainly curious how you were gonna set up that UBER Server MoBo you were gifted in the previous Mail Call vid. The first 12 minutes knocked me the [redacted] OUT XD
...On second thought, this Comedy of Errors (YES, I'M CALLING IT THAT!) caused a few laugh cramps at times! Hopefully the follow-up will be more straightforward! :D
That's very unfortunate. I *never* go on twitch to watch Vod's but might make an exception, this was interesting and fun (as always!)
"I've never seen a CAD package designed for 8088" FYI, I used Tango-Schematic and Tango-PCB (version 1.1 IIRC) back in 1984 on IBM XTs. I can't seem to find that version on any of the archive sites though.
Use single sided single density disk for cpm format. The single sided double density will not work,
These drives are not 360k they are 172. And you have to blank out the disk
Woah, so many memories... I used OrCAD 4.0 when I was studying electronics in college... :_)
I have two questions about the printing stuff: 1. If we would ignore the maximum DPI of the printer for once and buy cheap printer paper from a store, what is the maximum DPI of that paper ? 2. If you need 300-400 DPI, todays Laserprinters can print in higher DPI than that, have you tried to print something on such a laser printer from a friend ?
The problem with most consumer grade printers that I've tested is that they can put down ink at 300-1200 DPI but not consistently. The position of the dots wobbles all over. I tried to use consumer grade printers for this in pt2 and pt3: th-cam.com/video/CFm1-3QHHf4/w-d-xo.html Thermal label printers seem to be the key because they are made for small barcodes. But thermal isn't a good long term solution. And my overall goals are to get real cards produced that are as good as the originals.
This video title made me realise that I am in the wrong hobby.
This is fascinating, I had no idea this concept has been essentially productized. Seems potentially useful for all sorts of test scenarios if it can performs in an acceptable way -- I worked on a project with a deterministic engine and we'd capture replay files with bug reports for at least just the engine, and that was tremendously useful already. Being able to do that in a general way without modifying the underlying software -- head asplode I'm thinking the single thread limitation is probably pretty nearly intractable, and also probably why nobody has done this in a big way yet, but hmmmm.
FYI the PET has a hidden RIFA - it is literally molded IN TO the IEC socket. (the socket on the PET is not just a simple receptacle, it is an actual module that contains a hidden RIFA.) You would either have to dremel the thing open in order to remove the RIFA, or (the easier option) just replace it with a plain/normal IEC socket. (the mounting hole pattern is identical) The same thing applies to Commodore PET-style disk drive chassis as well.
Commodore PET reminds me Fallout terminals haha. I love it.
Oh Shelby, sweet summer child, technical designs generally aren't copyrightable even today -- when people copied the original Apple ROMs it was a genuine question whether software was more like a circuit design (or math, which was and is also not copyrightable) or more like a short story. In the same era, Haynes etc. were publishing third party repair manuals for cars with schematics. As long as they drafted it themselves and didn't just copy the literal artwork, selling properly reverse engineered schematics was and still is perfectly legal. Apple might get after you if they thought you were sharing a trade secret you got your hands on improperly, like from a contractor who's under NDA, but you really could sell iPhone schematics you reverse engineered straight from the actual device. Consider how terrible it would be if the first person to design a switching converter held a 100+ year copyright to that circuit design, and nobody else could make a schematic for it, or implement it for that matter, because that's really just a transformation of the schematic...
Used Pet to print out 16 bit values to draw a circle bars to simulate a Radar PPI sweep on a CRT monitor. Computer was a Univac 16 bit minicomputer. I don't remember if sin/cosine functions were in Comodore Basic or it was an add on.
Started with the chicklet keyooard, this is MUCH better!
Those idiots on Twitch are annoying.
Hi Shelby. I watch your content from Argentina. I really enjoy your content, although I lack the technical knowledge to understand most of it. Still, I really enjoy it. I have an ASUS P5N32-E-SLI mobo, and I would like to upload pictures of it to Caps Wiki. I just wanted to know if you think it's worth it, since it's an old system. Also, I've installed a serial port in my ASUS Prime A320M-K. Most chances are that I never get to use it, but still I like the feeling of having a relatively modern system with legacy ports. Cheers!
So I also own the Crew (I don't remember directly buying it, probably got it free somehow), looks like I played it one time in 2016, got one achievement, and never touched it again.
Loved the debugging session. Great stream!
Game looks fantastic!
the debugging gba code... its nearly impossible to just stop the game where you want it to... you will almost always will "pause" in the middle of a vblank routine.
Honeywell / Bull made an Z80 work-alike that ran CPM out of AM2901 bitslice units. CPU card was 2'x1'. Whole system fit in a clamshell case that was a lot like a squared-off life-raft housing. With obligatory front panel switch/lights. Don't have it anymore, sadly.
Yeaaaah, the iPod Shuffle 2g doesn't have a touchwheel. It's just 4 tact switches under a plastic ring. KDE Plasma 6 on Wayland can change scaling on the fly, also. And, hey, this SD card might seem excruciatingly slow, but I just backed up an SD card with *read speeds* of <1MBps. It took *13.5 hours* to read 64 GB.
Awesome video
I have a similar Pixma printer at home and it's a terrible piece of crap, it runs out of ink quickly and it's terribly expensive to constantly refill, I bought a simple black and white HP laser printer instead, and it's good for 99% of things
This was a perfectly average home printer experience.
Wonder if you could make a 24pin impact printer do fine enough dots to make that work?
Cool. I tried to reverse engineer as much as I could back in the day. Will definitely try some of your things on my e-Reader.
I wonder if it can read from a photographic negative. The Applied Science video about making photolithography masks from a few years ago might be relevant here, and maybe an opportunity for a collaboration.