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Gameboy Advance Frontlight Success

skirch writes: "Remember Portablemonopoly.com? Well, Adam finally has a great working prototype (with some great pics) that he was able to hack together for about $30. Not that $30 is bad, but he mentions a possible group order, and I'm sure that would bring the price down quite a bit. He estimates that it will only diminish the GBA's battery life by 25-30%. Original Slashdot post."

113 comments

  1. Goddamn, I think I was robbed... by Eso · · Score: 0, Funny

    I would probably be gloating with champagne right now, but the stupid thing made me wait 20 seconds...

    Sort this, file that... I'll make 'em all pay.

    1. Re:Goddamn, I think I was robbed... by Benjamin+Kuz · · Score: 1

      Your first duty is to justice - not the systematic killing of poeple who have nothing to do with your plight. You'd do well to remember that. Random killing is not your duty - it's a mockery of the systems.

  2. fun times by obi327 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    this is really excellent. i wish more people would try to hack all sorts of smaller platforms. sometime it would even be nice to see linux on a gameboy :)

    --
    The dog got loose on my computer, and now there's XP all over the screen. -Paul www.ploeb.net
    1. Re:fun times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No it wouldn't, that'd just be dumb.

    2. Re:fun times by nsafreak · · Score: 1

      Linux on a gameboy??? You're kidding me, right? I can see the use of putting Linux on a lot of other consoles (Dreamcast, etc) since you can attach a keyboard to them. But putting it on a Gameboy would be dumb since the only form of input you'd have would be the controller.

    3. Re:fun times by obi327 · · Score: 0

      ya but wouldnt it be some swift competition for those espresso pcs? take your server with you... and when you get bored with it... play monopoly!

      --
      The dog got loose on my computer, and now there's XP all over the screen. -Paul www.ploeb.net
    4. Re:fun times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you even read what was done???

      The guy installed a _frontlight_ in a gameboy, no linux was involved at all!

      --
      Helge Jensen

    5. Re:fun times by jamesidm · · Score: 1

      have not tested this myself yet, but goodGBX lists (and I have) the following rom:
      Unix (PD).gb
      size 32KB

    6. Re:fun times by jamesidm · · Score: 1

      ok, have looked at the file now... it is a simple emulation of unix, though I can't get past the login prompt (seems to have a built in password/username). A 'virtual' keyboard pops up (and can be hidden by pressing select I think)

      I doubt it is a genuine unix - just something to look cool. There is no init stuff, just straight into the login prompt. Bet it can't even run apache :)

      (btw; I know, I know - I should have done this before posting the original message :P)

    7. Re:fun times by slim · · Score: 2

      Linux on a gameboy??? You're kidding me, right? I can see the use of putting Linux on a lot of other consoles (Dreamcast, etc) since you can attach a keyboard to them. But putting it on a Gameboy would be dumb since the only form of input you'd have would be the controller.

      [sigh] Linux is an operating system. What you're used to typing 'ls' into is the shell. There is no reason whatsoever why the first program a UNIX init runs has to be a text login/shell. It could be anything. It could be something designed for a small screen, a couple of buttons and a joypad. No problem.

      Furthermore, the GBA has a linkup port, you could probably hook a terminal up to it.

      NB, the best reason I can think of for putting a UNIX on Dreamcast (Linux and NetBSD are both coming along well) is to eventually use it as a development platform for applications which do not require a keyboard (an xpilot port? please?).

    8. Re:fun times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why? What would you do with Linux on Gameboy? For that matter, what are you doing with Linux now?

    9. Re:fun times by Dimensio · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Like others have said, Linux is the OS and they keyboard is used to interface the shell, not the OS.

      Besides, who knows, with the right tools/technology you might be able to hack out a cartridge that turns the GBA into a passable PDA -- at $99 that's pretty cheap and who knows what could be done through the link cable (true, getting *hardware* from the open source community might be difficult)

      There are already dev tools of some kind for the GBA -- a number of homebrew games have popped up, mostly to be used with emulation projects -- but I dunno how easily one could hack out a Linux port.

      Hell, perhaps you could turn a GBA into a really cheap webserver (er, if you could fit the site data onto something that would be compatable with the GBA cart slot or the link port).

      Oh, and I guess I should say: Imagine a Beowulf cluster of these!

    10. Re:fun times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People who have actually hacked a GBA, how hard would it be to make an adapter that would allow a CF memory card to be plugged into the GBA cartridge slot? Is this even technically possible?

      If a CF card could be used, a Linux port might be a snap. A lot of the hardware is similar to the iPAQ. It would be limited in usefulness, but a way fun hack.

      A GBA emulator for the HHLinux iPAQ would rock too. It should be possible, however the current GBA emulation core is written in x86 assembler and would have to be re-written in ARM assembler.

      Cpt_Kirks

  3. Looking good by nsafreak · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Looks very promising, I have a light for my GBA that works pretty well although it could work better. What I'd really like to see is a solution that you could easily install. Something along the lines of removing the lens and installing the lighting package and putting the lens back on.

    1. Re:Looking good by kyrre · · Score: 1

      There are number of such devices on the market allready. Some of them at: http://www.lik-sang.com/catalog/product_list.php?c ategory=48&

  4. Portable Monopoly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I thought that was Windows CE? Have I been misinformed?

    1. Re:Portable Monopoly? by ChiefCrazyTalk · · Score: 0

      Don't feel so bad - I thought it was a portable version of the Parker Brothers board game. I was sorely dissapointed.

  5. GBA is a handheld, and he made it better. by Maul · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The only big thing lacking on it was a lighted screen, from my POV, and this guy solved the problem. I'm very interested in this hardware hack for my own GBA.

    --

    "You spoony bard!" -Tellah

    1. Re:GBA is a handheld, and he made it better. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about installing a dimmer knob or slider so the light brightness can be adjusted or turned off completely--depending on the condition at the time. This could go a long was to extending the life of the batteries.

      Nintendo should have done this.

    2. Re:GBA is a handheld, and he made it better. by jx100 · · Score: 1

      The guy said that there is a switch so that the light could be turned off manually.

  6. This guy has style by kingdon · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Not only did he go off and build something instead of just whining, but I also was amused by the part from the mini-FAQ in which he responds to people who whine and complain and tell him he has it all wrong: "Enough already! I don't care whether or not you think what I am going is a waste of time. If you think this site is pointless or retarded, dear God save me the bandwidth and take your ass elsewhere."

    1. Re:This guy has style by pangloss · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I thought the same thing. Here's a (Score: 5) post from the original Slashdot article:

      A backlight won't help in the GBA's case. The LCD screen has reflective faceting to improve the visual quality (not to be confused with the reflective plastic cover that actually makes frontlighting the unit unbearable due to glare).

      Any light shone through the back will only succeed in "washing out" the colour due to the properties of the LCD. Personally I would have preferred an organic electroluminescent display (OLED) to this darkened LCD nightmare. OLEDs produce their own light and are more energy efficient than LCDs, let alone LCDs with backlighting.

      I'm glad Adam didn't give up on the basis of our informed community input ;) Cheers to the happy hacking spirit.
    2. Re:This guy has style by MfA · · Score: 1

      Didnt he use the LED's for front lighting but below the plastic cover? (if so that post is spot on ...)

    3. Re:This guy has style by synapz · · Score: 1

      Yes he did, but the previous post is not talking about using LEDs for lighting, but saying that the solution should not involve LCD at all ('let alone backlighting'). The solution on portablemonopoly uses LEDs to frontlight and LCD display, which the 'expert' whiners said wouldn't work due to the high reflectivity of the screen cover. Shows what they know!

    4. Re:This guy has style by sahala · · Score: 1
      ...this is what Adam said on this page about how backlighting.

      Backlighting the GBA will not work. Because the Sharp LCD is employs is reflective only, any light that passes through the LCD will not illuminate any pixels but simply wash them out. It is unfortunately as simple as that. A transmissive or transflective LCD will facilitate backlighting.

      Adam's improvement doesn't use backlighting.

  7. It's too bad Nintendo didn't do this... by Jayde+Stargunner · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's really unfortunate this wasn't implemented with the actual GBA. Engineered correctly (and maybe centered :-) this would solve many of the current GBA playability woes...and I'm certain Nitnendo could have made it more battery conservitive.

    Honestly, one is forces to use a plug-in light in almost all occasions--especialy with dark games like Circle of the Moon--so I can't think that a smaller interal light would havedrained more battery life that a Worm Lamp or Light Shield.

    And, if you think about it... Worm Lamp's and the life are only 10 bucks as standalone units, with plugins, plastic casing, and shipping materials. I can't imagine this would have raised the production cost of the GBA itself by more than 5 bucks.

    I would have gladly paid 5 bucks to make my GBA playable more than 10% of the time I feel like playing it. The screen has been the biggest deterrant for me finishing CotM and buying more than 2 games...

    But, of course... Nintendo really doesn't have to worry about another handheld coming along and being competitive. :-)

    -Jayde

    --
    What's a sig?
    1. Re:It's too bad Nintendo didn't do this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
      It's really unfortunate this wasn't implemented with the actual GBA. Engineered correctly (and maybe centered :-) this would solve many of the current GBA playability woes...and I'm certain Nitnendo could have made it more battery conservitive.

      Yes, it's very unfortunate. Seeing as i personally would be willing to pay even 2x the current cost of a GBA to get one i can actually play in below "optimal" light conditions. "Optimal" being in a situation where you constantly have a light directly above your GBA to light up the screen. This doesnt happen as much as you would like it to, which defeats the entire purpose of having a PORTABLE gaming system. I would wager, carrying a GBA around with you on a day-to-day basis, (which i do) the actual chances you get to play the thing is very slim, due to the so called "optimal" light conditions being very very rare. The fact that i can't play it in my bedroom with the light on shows a definate flaw in the gba design that nintendo really needs to fix to regain mine, and many others faith in the companys ability to produce systems worth purchasing.

      Portablemonopoly.com deserves a medal for doing what nintendo can't. This guy has done by himself, what a multi-billion dollar company was too lazy to research themselves. Kudos to portablemonopoly.com!

    2. Re:It's too bad Nintendo didn't do this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nintendo usually releases a few revisions of the same product (GB, GBC, GBP, and the N64 color vareity). I am counting that subsequently Nintendo will add this to the GBA.

  8. Am I the only one... by BIGJIMSLATE · · Score: 3, Informative

    ...who would rather just pay the $10 and get something like this:

    http://www.ebgames.com/ebx/categories/products/p ro duct.asp?pf_id=201208

    Cool mod, but I'm cheap. The $20 I'd save might let me buy some cool GBA game like "Mary Kate & Ashley Olsen's Big Adventure". :p

    1. Re:Am I the only one... by startled · · Score: 2

      Yes, you may be the only one. All the in-production lights suck. The Glow Guard is the "best light yet", meaning it sucks slightly less than the worm light. This guy's hack definitely looks better from the pictures on his site.

    2. Re:Am I the only one... by jwakko · · Score: 1

      This mod to a Pelican Light Shield Advance was pretty easy to do and the parts are readily available. I'm pretty happy with it - it's better than anything I've seen for sale.

      The portablemonopoly solution is better, though - if for no other reason than eliminating the glare from the light source.

  9. How hard could it be? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    GBA emulator on a Palm m505...they are front lit and run for weeks on one charge. Expansion cards to save your game, etc.

    GBA emulator on an iBook...wow, music and internet....output to your TV and go big screen.

    Run the GB image to a HMD...5 ft. virtual floating image...now that's cool.

    1. Re:How hard could it be? by arbitrary+nickname · · Score: 2, Informative

      Current GBA emulators on the PC only get around 70% speed on a P3-667.

      They can probably all still be optimised... but I don't think there's much hope for a Palm, or even WinCE machine...

    2. Re:How hard could it be? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      are you sure of this? i have not conducted any formal benchmarking, but from experience with playing gbc games on my AMD k6-2 400 at home, and P3 500 at work, the speed of the emu is comparable to that of the hardware.

  10. Re:input by Kris_J · · Score: 3, Informative
  11. They would get my $120. by Jamuraa · · Score: 1

    If nintendo would get off their asses and figure out that their GBA's biggest problem is light and not battery usage, they would put this into new GBAs right now.

    I'm actually holding off on buying a GBA because I remember all those times with my ORIGINAL GB when I had to tilt the screen to see right and get contortions in my neck. When I heard there were light problems, that blew it for me. I was planning on buying one straight away before.

    If nintendo put this into production, they would get my $120 I been holding for a couple months.

    --
    You can't see this if you have sigs turned off.
    1. Re:They would get my $120. by pallex · · Score: 1

      Get a Glowguard. £10 in the UK, probably $10 in the states.

    2. Re:They would get my $120. by jawad · · Score: 1

      And get some glare while you're at it. This hack is the nicest I've seen so far.

  12. Amazing... by Jace+of+Fuse! · · Score: 5, Funny

    The amazing thing is that no matter where I use my GBA it's too dark...

    ...except at work.

    The lighting conditions are just perfect in my work-cell and it seems that's the only place I'm able to get any quality GBA time in.

    "...but boss! I just can't see the screen at home or in the break room!"

    --

    "Everything you know is wrong. (And stupid.)"

    Moderation Totals: Wrong=2, Stupid=3, Total=5.
    1. Re:Amazing... by FuShanks · · Score: 1

      Same here.

      Not that I've tried... I just assume they would be. Due to the conditions of the environment. And stuff.

      Gotta go.

      --
      like a knight in shining armor/from a long time ago
    2. Re:Amazing... by \\ · · Score: 1

      heh, i've found the same thing, the only location with perfect lighting is at work.

      my brother claims the bathroom has great lighting as well.. but if i haven't taken my wirless + laptop into the bathroom yet, i can't justify trying the gba..

  13. Adam good. Nintendo bad. by motherhead · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I love that new commercial where the kid is playing with his GBA while at church (never mind all the class inferred by that... marketing weasels...). That is just absolute bullshit. I can barely play Tony Hawk 2 in my kitchen much less a room with low amounts of ambient lighting. They had to be filming that commercial looking at each other like... "Hey, it's not my lawsuit".

    Adam is a deity. Nintendo owes every damn one of us an apology.

    He (Adam) says it best when he comments that the glass covering the Worlds Most Useless Display is more like a mirror then anything else. So all the lame "Shark Lights, Wiggie Lights, PokoLights, Very Happy Joy Fun Lights" or whatever does nothing more then throw glare over the entire screen.

    I'd pay thirty bucks to take something useless and render it otherwise.

    1. Re:Adam good. Nintendo bad. by mmol_6453 · · Score: 1

      I''d pay thirty bucks to take something useless and render it otherwise.

      Does that mean you'd pay thirty bucks to change a windows-infected hard drive into a bunch of paperclips?

      --
      What's this Submit thingy do?
    2. Re:Adam good. Nintendo bad. by Plutor · · Score: 1

      I don't see how Nintendo owes you an apology. If you dislike your GBA that much, most stores have return policies even on opened merchandise. No one forced you to purchase one. You decided that it was worth the expense to own a high-quality portable device. Granted, the lack of reasonable built-in lighting a big problem and I think Nintendo dropped the ball on that and I'm confused how Nintendo of all companies could have missed it in play testing. But that doesn't make Nintendo "bad", and it doesn't mean they owe anybody anything. They made a kicking portable game platform, and if you aren't happy with it, bring it back or sell it on ebay.

    3. Re:Adam good. Nintendo bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      OK, am I the only GBA owner on the face of the planet that doesn't mind the display? Under the proper lighting, it's amazingly vibrant. Under slightly less perfect conditions, it's still usable!!!

      I can use it in my basement under a potlight and it's an amazingly crisp picture. I can use it on the train to and from work and only fret in tunnels. I can use it under the flourescents at work. I can use it outside during the day.

      Seriously, what is people's problems with this unit? Oh, no, I can't use my GBA in the dark! Waaah, waaah! Whatever will I do?
      Nintendo has delivered a worthy successor to the GB, backwards compatible, freaking powerful, affordable and with one amazing battery life. Not to mention the ability to multiplay single cartriges. Don't sell 'em short dammit!

    4. Re:Adam good. Nintendo bad. by motherhead · · Score: 1

      The problem with short posts is that they can sometimes sound glib. I didn't mean to sound glib. I really enjoy the GBA, it does so much well that I can actually desire pissing away time with it more then say on my laptops or my palm IIIc.

      I am really glad you are enjoying your Gameboy Advance. I am not starting an anti-GBA political movement. No.

      So basically all the rant about Nintendo being bad is directed squarely on (what is IMHO) the worst possible display, ever. Now the GBA itself is capable of displaying wonderfully vibrant and delightful images. Unfortunately I don't want the migraines caused by trying to get it not to reflect every damn thing in the world while only having half the display adequately lit at any one time.

      I am guessing, and I am aware that this is a (dangerous) sweeping generalization, that you would have paid $30 bucks more at the Best Buy if you noticed that the GBA came with a lovely, bright display that was actually easy on your eyes. I personally would not have hesitated.

      Also: Nintendo is so still going to get my Gamecube money. I have that recessive gene that makes me by consoles that I will never have time to play with. And no I will sell any of them (nor my GBA) on Ebay. Ebay scares me; I don't want to do business with people shopping for human infant adenoids or whatever...

    5. Re:Adam good. Nintendo bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      actually after reflecting on it, the "Worst Possible Display, ever", would squirt acid in your eyes periodically, and perhaps show nude pictures of steve ballamer. so... i should thank nintendo for not choosing that one.

  14. Yep, the only bad thing about the GBA.. by ikekrull · · Score: 4, Funny

    is that you can't play it in bed without having the light on, making your girlfriend mad.

    This hack has the potential to restore my relationship to pre-GBA goodness!

    --
    I gots ta ding a ding dang my dang a long ling long
    1. Re:Yep, the only bad thing about the GBA.. by ameoba · · Score: 5, Funny

      As long as you let her play with her battery operated toys, she's out of line complaining in the first place.

      --
      my sig's at the bottom of the page.
    2. Re:Yep, the only bad thing about the GBA.. by stuffman64 · · Score: 1

      What are you doing in bed playing a GBA when your girlfriend is next to you?

      --
      --- At my sig, unleash hell.
    3. Re:Yep, the only bad thing about the GBA.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Crying, softly...

    4. Re:Yep, the only bad thing about the GBA.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



      Battery operated??

      <Allen>
      Ugh? Dual overhead, 350cc, poly-carbon, quick-release pull-starter. 1250 ft/lbs, emergency kill switch, inline, super-charged, 'glass packs.. Arhg oh Oh OH AAHHH!
      </Allen>

      Not that I swing this way, but I get a little misty just thinking about it.

    5. Re:Yep, the only bad thing about the GBA.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      What are you doing in bed playing a GBA when your girlfriend is next to you?

      a better question is what is she doing to you while you're "playing"?

      ahh...sounds like a great life.

  15. what about another kind of hacking? by mj6798 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I keep wondering: the Game Boy Advance is based on a 32bit ARM, it's cheap, and it runs the Cygnus toolchain. So--has anybody ported Linux to it? Are there free development tools out for it? Where's a good place to start reading up on GBA development using standard open source tools (a brief search on Google didn't reveal much)?

    1. Re:what about another kind of hacking? by Rykard · · Score: 0

      Free, but not entirely legal, IIRC... Check the GameDev.net news archives, I'm pretty sure I saw something there a while back.

      --
      Rykard
      Breaking the Internet one standard at a time, since 1999
    2. Re:what about another kind of hacking? by jfaulken · · Score: 0

      http://www.gbadev.org
      http://www.devrs.com/gba

    3. Re:what about another kind of hacking? by Control-Z · · Score: 1

      WHY would you want to run Linux in a GBA? How about porting Linux to my toaster? I waste lots of time waiting for toast when I could be writing shell scripts in binary with the toaster lever.

    4. Re:what about another kind of hacking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      So--has anybody ported Linux to it?

      Umm, can you fit linux on a 64mbit (8 megebyte) card? and if you can, is it worth it? What room do you have left to run USEFULL apps? It's a gaming system, and to use it otherwise is stupid. For the cost of the system + flash card and linker, for the price its better to buy a palm or something and try get linux running on that.

  16. Overly Cynical? by squaretorus · · Score: 1

    Nintendo are pretty cool, but they have a pretty dodgy history of anti-competitive attitudes, and over pricing on some of their games stuff. I have to say though that this is less obvious this past while - rampant during SNES era though!

    I'll bet if the games shops had 'dark' GBAs and 'lit' ones, even if the lit ones ate batteries twice as fast and cost 25% more the majority would go for the lit one. Nintendo should listen to this. I think they will. But first they will grind on with the dark GBA until it reckons everyone that REALLY wants one HAS one.

    Then it will release the GBA 'lit' in a bunch of funky new colours, with no increased battery drain and sell a new GBA to a good %age of those who already have a 'dark' GBA. They will also release another Mario Kart at the same time. Just like Star Wars DVDs and collectors comics. Whenever you have a smallish market - just try to sell the same dumb ass the same thing more than once.

    These guys are smart!

  17. Petition? by NitsujTPU · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Our ultimate goal with this Web site is to measure the amount of dissatisfaction with the Game Boy Advance in the form of a petition. The results will be published on this site and, of course, sent to Nintendo and many other media entities.

    If you're dissatisfied with the Game Boy Advance... Why did you buy one?

    Fight the power that... uhh... provides you with video games...damn it!

    Come on, this is along the lines of people who petitioned Prodigy to switch to the IP protocol suite (I hate when people call it TCP/IP)... Why not just change providers to one that gives you what you want?

    1. Re:Petition? by Jas26785 · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah, compare a commodity like service providers to video gaming devices. At best, that's asinine.

      You could switch providers with little or no obvious effect on functionality and performance, while on the other end of the spectrum, we have video gaming devices with completely different games and publishers. Not to mention there aren't even any comparable video gaming devices.

      And you're bumped to 3!

    2. Re:Petition? by Lizard_King · · Score: 2

      OK, so which handheld gaming device would *you* switch to?

      It's not a requirement to be 100% satisfied with products that you purchase. You are allowed to give feedback to manufacturers and providers to try and improve their products.

      Point in case: I own a Jeep. I love my Jeep. There are things about my Jeep that I would love for Jeep-Eagle-Chryseler to change, but that doesn't make me want to go out and buy a different type of car.

      --
      "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a son-of-a-bitch." - Jack Nicholson
    3. Re:Petition? by Portax · · Score: 1

      What? "If you're dissatisfied with the Game Boy Advance... Why did you buy one"? They already bought it, you can't be dissatisfied with a product you never tried and to try it, most people would have to buy it. If you mean why don't they return it, then it still doesn't mean they shouldn't petition for a change.

      What's wrong with petitioning a company to change? Not every consumer knows about things like Prodigy using IP protcol suite, so forcing a company to change can benefit those who are clueless. They don't want other people getting something they feel is a crappy product. Nothing wrong with that.

    4. Re:Petition? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
      Honestly, most of these people were misled by the Gameboy commercials. They knew that it was not going to be backlit, but they thought that the screen would be more visable (remember that commercial that shows someone playing in a dark church?). Also some people are dissatisfied because they know that Nintendo could have made the GBA better, but chose not to. And others are dissatisfied because they could not get their money back.

      I was there on the IGN boards at day 1 when Adam bought his gameboy. He made quite an ass of himself there for a few weeks venting his dissatisfaction before he got tired of a number of us telling him to "fuck off for the love of God and leave us in peace", in not so many words. The petitition on his site is a leftover from when portablemonopoly.com was more of a "happy fun Nintendo slander and defamation corner" than a serious project. After many nasty replies on his message boards, he subsequently removed most of the slander, along with the boards. The petition is just a leftover from times past.

      I must say that I am happy to see that his site actually turned into something useful. I know many GBA fanboys breathed a sigh of relief when his project forced him to leave the IGN boards. But we never imagined he would be succesful :)

    5. Re:Petition? by SupaFly · · Score: 1

      Why not just change providers to one that gives you what you want?

      Because in this case, there isn't one, and there probably won't be for a very long time. Nintendo pretty much has the portable market cornered (more so in the US than Japan), so we might as well ask them to make it suck less.

    6. Re:Petition? by bitrott · · Score: 1
      Rail against this guy all you want, he's right. The GBA was available to test in toystores across the nation weeks before it's release. Even in the overexposed light at the local Toy's R US, I could tell that the GBA wasn't going to live up to my expectations. Did that stop me from buying it? Hell No. That shit still works.


      Did anyone honestly believe they were going to be able to play in a poorly lit church while Octopi and a WWF choir stood in attendence? I think not, if so though, you are all more easily manipulated than I thought. Finding a new backlight system is a great idea... his "portable monopoly" has always been a sour pill for me. NOONE us forcing any of you to buy the bloody system. If Nintendo wants to put out a questionable product that's their prerogative.


      BTW... video game companies have been pulling this shit for years. Even the earliest arcade/atari products came shipped in boxes featuring artwork that only the newest systems in THIS decade could emulate. False advertising or attractive packaging? Well, I for one can speak to the frustration I feel whenever I see a gorgeous packaging job, but know the game's gfx don't come close... chew on that..

    7. Re:Petition? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Every store I've seen the GBA sold in (Toys R Us, Future Shit^H^Hop, EB) has had the GBA on display.

      It was only because of the display model that I bought one.

    8. Re:Petition? by Portax · · Score: 1

      I'm sure those displays were well-lighted, though. Lots of people pre-ordered them or bought them online, too.

    9. Re:Petition? by Benjamin+Kuz · · Score: 1

      I'd switch to a laptop...well, not exacltly handheld, but the cats ass to be sure ;)

  18. GBA lighting by Plessiez · · Score: 3, Funny

    I'm lucky that I ride the tube in London (the metro, for you yanks) every day to work. This gives me about 45 minutes to play Castlevania in perfect lighting conditions and then switch off and lose all my progress because I can't find a save room.

    The only other place I've found the lighting conditions to be good was a carpark in Texas at midday. With the sun directly overhead the screen looks great! Unfortunately after a few days of this my pasty english skin burnt to an unhealthy red, my girlfriend was irritated and wouldn't take me out in public for a week.

    1. Re:GBA lighting by ChiefCrazyTalk · · Score: 0

      FYI, The subway/underground system in US cities varies by what name it is called. I believe it is Metro in DC, but is the "El" in Chicago, the "T" in Pittsburgh, etc.

    2. Re:GBA lighting by brunns · · Score: 1

      You should try the Northern line - that way you'd get 45 minutes on some days, 2 hours on others.

      --

      If you moderate me down I shall become more powerful than you can possibly imagine.
    3. Re:GBA lighting by iCEBaLM · · Score: 3, Funny

      I'm lucky that I ride the tube in London (the metro, for you yanks)

      You mean the subway perhaps?

      -- iCEBaLM

    4. Re:GBA lighting by Galvatron · · Score: 1

      The "El" is an Elevated Train, hence the name. The T is Boston, unless by an amazing coincidence it is both Pittsburg and Boston. A few more: Muni Underground in San Francisco (aka the Streetcar, because it spends a lot of its time aboveground), the Subway in New York, and the Monorail in Disneyland :)

      --
      "The question of whether a computer can think is no more interesting than that of whether a submarine can swim" -EWD
  19. Back lit GBA! by �laC|n · · Score: 4, Informative

    Hmm.. check this out!
    According to this page, Nintendo is planning a japanese release of a new GBA WITH backlit screen in december!

    --
    __ elacin
    1. Re:Back lit GBA! by datajosh · · Score: 1
      And not a shred of evidence to support their claim. I work for the "largest video game specialty retailer in the world" (that's GameStop, Inc. - formerly Babbage's, Etc. - for those that don't know) and occasionally bad info gets thrown around. When I started there, my manager was even telling people that the Xbox would play PC and Dreamcast games... and this was well after the point Microsoft had denied that rumor.

      My point is: you shouldn't always trust retailers for information on video game systems. Especially on something that has yet to be announced or even rumored at this point. And that's exactly what this article is doing. I don't doubt that Nintendo is working on a new GBA. I do, however, seriously doubt we'll see it before the GBA's 2 year anniversary. It just wouldn't make sense business-wise.

  20. You're right by NitsujTPU · · Score: 1

    After all, how can you live without video games?

  21. Their Fault by NitsujTPU · · Score: 1

    People preorder Windows XP too, what can I say :-/

    1. Re:Their Fault by Portax · · Score: 1

      What does XP have to do with this? With XP at least you can expect a product based on your past experiences with Microsoft. How were people supposed to know the lighting for a GBA was horrible? The original GameBoy and GBC were pretty good handhelds in my opinion.

    2. Re:Their Fault by NitsujTPU · · Score: 1

      So is the gameboy advance ironically. It's a fine system everything considered. What can I say, most lighting systems would kill battery life. Even this one cuts it by a quarter and it's LEDs... which were more expensive a few months ago...

  22. Tycho can finally be happy! by FireCar · · Score: 1

    http://www.penny-arcade.com/view.php3?date=2001-06 -13&res=l

    This comic sums up how we've all felt.

  23. OLED by pashdown · · Score: 1

    Who cares about a backlit GBA? Bring on the OLED version!

  24. GameBoy Advance moaning and groaning. by BigLabMonkey · · Score: 0, Troll

    Look, I am sick and tired of people complaining about how dark the GBA screen is. I have had a GBA since the launch in June and I am incredibly satisfied with it. I will agree that a backlit screen would've significantly improved the overall playability of the system. However, it would've significantly affected the price of the system, its release date, the battery life, and the overall maintenance of the system. I too have struggled while playing Castlevania COTM, Mario Kart, Advance Wars, etc. But this is a blessed burden we all must deal with. The GBA will outsell the PS2, XBOX, and GCN with good reason: it is the best handheld system made to-date. So, I suggest you all get a light-shield or a worm-light and calm the f*#$ down, cuz nintendo isnt gonna be making any new GBAs.

  25. A true geek by cluke · · Score: 1
    You know he is a true geek with this classic sentence:

    "the frontlight does not degrade the LCD's image quality when you compare it against a GBA in all but the most efficient lighting arrangements (i.e. a well-positioned lamp or a window with sunlight pouring in)"

    So in this quest for light, he doesn't even consider the possibility of actually going outside? ;-)

  26. Your big problem will be RAM. by jockm · · Score: 1

    The GBA only had 256K of RAM, so you would need a special cartridge that had additional RAM. No reason why it couldn't be done but the cost would be prohibative.

    Also the ARM in the GBA does not have a MMU, so you would have to use ucLinux...

    --

    What do you know I wrote a novel
  27. GBC .LT. GBA by yerricde · · Score: 3, Informative

    but from experience with playing gbc games on my AMD k6-2 400 at home, and P3 500 at work, the speed of the emu is comparable to that of the hardware. [strong added by yerricde]

    You're comparing the Game Boy Color to the Game Boy Advance. Game Boy Color is about as complex as the old Nintendo Entertainment System to emulate, and LoopyNES (the most accurate NES emulator, available from Zophar.net's NES collection) runs at full speed on a P100. However, Super NES is about three or four times more complex as NES, and GBA is nearly twice as complex as Super NES, with two layers of Mode 7 and affine transformation (i.e. rotation/scaling) on every single sprite, but with two dumb but easy DMA channels for sound instead of a pain-in-the-ass SPC700 processor.

    Here's a comparison of GBA hardware to that of the Super NES:
    Read the rest of this comment...

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  28. Because you never live to see the games go PD by yerricde · · Score: 1

    If you're dissatisfied with the Game Boy Advance... Why did you buy one?

    Because nintendo has a 95-year monopoly on games produced by Miyamoto's team, Rare, etc., and exclusive contracts with some publishers. By the time the games fall into the public domain, not only will the lifetime of the system have expired, but so will 99+ percent of the players.

    Even ignoring the game design issue and assuming clones like Blizzard's Dia-blow and some freeware game are as good as Zelda(tm), the other portable systems available in stores located in the United States of America (Palm, WinCE, etc.) have input devices that don't work for games and must be tethered to a $1000 PC that 13-year-olds can't afford with paper route income and that their parents think is THE DEVIL!

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  29. I'm waiting for a VR headset (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bah, if Nintendo thinks I'm going to pay for some crappy LED thing with an external light from this other guy, they've got it all wrong. They are SOOOO behind the times!

    I'm not buying a Gameboy Advance until it comes with a plug-in VR system so I can wear it on my head and see Mario as if it were on a 52" TV. Yeah, and I want CD quality sound as well, and a proximity sensor so I know if people are near me when I've got the headset on and err, I want Linux to run on it darnit.. and what happened to Quake 3 and Unreal Tournament.

    I think Nintendo are a complete disappointment!
    [/sarcasm]

  30. No Castlevania? by shadowcabbit · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I find it very amusing that the games he uses to demonstrate the hack's effectiveness are Mario Kart and Advance Wars, two of the most colorful, vibrant games available. I have NEVER had any difficulty seeing the screen even in dim light while playing AW. I would be a lot more impressed if he had demonstrated Castlevania: Circle of the Moon.
    Or better yet, he should have just stopped tilting at windmills altogether. The dark color scheme problem is something that has to be worked around in software-- i.e. developers shouldn't choose varying shades of jet black on midnight blue as their color scheme. The GBA's difficult angles are just an added factor the developers and artists have to work around.
    And another thing, as long as I'm up on this soapbox. I realize that the intent of the hack was to "prove displeasure in the GBA" and prove some conspiracy-theorist-wet-dream "monopoly" on the handheld market. But there is a very simple reason why Nintendo has the only portable video game system currently, and it is the same reason why Sony has the leading console (for now) and why (gasp!) Microsoft has the leading OS. It is the software support. The GB caught on because of Tetris; the GBC because of Pokemon, and the GBA because of all of its launch titles (except maybe Iridion). PS2 has the best games released for it and coming for it (MGS2, Klonoa 2, FF10, need I go on?). Windows systems are popular because quite literally that's what everything runs on nowadays (I know there are exceptions, but I'm thinking within the context of gaming; the really big-name games are all for Win98 etc). In all cases, the "monopoly" exists because nobody bought the competition.

    --
    "Why Subscribe?" Good question...
  31. You can't back-light the GBA. by Thedalek · · Score: 1

    Whether or not Nintendo is actually planning a lit GBA, I don't know, but I do know that they won't be doing it backlit. The type of display used in the GBA is a REFLECTIVE lcd. That means that it needs light from the front in order to be visible. If it has light coming in from the back, all you see is white, and your world is woe.

    Notice, portablemonopoly.com keeps talking about "frontlight solutions".

    --
    Happiness is relative, Based upon the way we live.
    1. Re:You can't back-light the GBA. by 10100101 · · Score: 1

      No-one's stopping them from using another LCD.

  32. nintendo are not a monoploy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I am sick to death of people saying that nintendo have a monopoly in the handheld arena. This is not the case, There are loads of handheld's avilable in japan such as the NeoGeo, the only problem is that none of them have really taken off in America. Also you could say that Palm and WinCe have control of that niche, these things are just gameboys for adults after all. You also have loads of those cheap handhelds that only play one game, etc etc.



    Nintendo did have a monopoly on console's but they do not have a monopoly on handhelds.


    but I spose since America is the center of the universe everywhere has to be like it.



    Also people are making to much of a big deal about the lack of a backlight on the GBA, I mean I have one and have never had a problem with the screen being too dark, for the life of me I can't understand what halve you people are complaining about, and I play CTTM all the time. but I suppose that the internet is a culture of complant.


    Go ahead and flame me I dont care.

  33. Re:Let me get this straight... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And who the f@#k are you to tell me what I should be doing with my time? What does the terrorist attacks have to do with personal interest anyway? Sure, its a terrible tragedy, but should I sit on my ass and mourn for rest of my life? Think not. So what do you do with your time anyway? I'm guessing that you masterbate in front of the mirror at least 5 times a day. What the hell are even doing on this site if you hate our interests so much? I hope a plane crashes into the side of your head!

  34. Hm... by doc_traig · · Score: 1

    Sounds like a man in-the-know, doesn't it?

    --
    So long, michael. Don't let the door hit you...