KnoppiXMAME 1.0 Released
Ant writes "KnoppixMAME is a bootable arcade machine emulator with hardware detection and autoconfiguration. It works automatically on all modern and not-so-modern hardware, including gameports and joysticks. It is powered by Knoppix Debian GNU/Linux, X-MAME, and gxmame." Update: 06/19 23:18 GMT by S : Although there are earlier versions in the release directory, looks like V1.0 hasn't made it onto the FTP just yet. Meanwhile, Jim points out the AdvanceCD image, which is "..also a bootable ISO image of a minimal Linux
distribution containing MAME, but weighing in at 16 MB rather than
200 MB so there is more room for ROMs."
Be patient, unlike certain slash editors, who should have made sure the file was actually in the directory they were pointing to. :-)
About: KnoppixMAME is a bootable arcade machine emulator with hardware detection and autoconfiguration. It works automatically on all modern and not-so-modern hardware, including gameports, CowboyNeal and joysticks. It is powered by Knoppix Debian GNU/Linux, X-MAME, and gxmame.
/ramdisk/home can also be copied to the root of the ISO to make configuration changes persistent. Networking support is now enabled and supported with xmame and gxmame. XMAME has been updated to 0.69 and gxmame to 0.33. Xv is now the default display mode; it can be changed by using the "dga" option on the boot commandline. The ISO is now 100MB smaller, at 200MB.
Changes: ROMs can now be put on the CD ISO without having to remaster/recompress Knoppix.
Save yourself the time and download them like everyone else does. Most of the Genesis games were what, 512kb? Hit up a ROM channel on IRC.
You'd need to desolder the ROMs from the cartridge and read them with an EPROM reader. The pinouts are often different from EPROMs, so that's another thing that needs to be dealt with. (with some wires and an IC socket or 2)
Sega CDs are just CDs. Really easy to copy these days, and I've heard the Sega CD console has no protection (so it can actually run games on CD-R).
As far as Knoppix is concerned (or any other program), there is no difference in media but the size. The filesystem is, as in a CD, ISO9960 with rock-ridge extensions. (Normal video DVDs also have an UDF filesystem, but it isn't required nor does it conflicts with the ISO9660 one.)
I can't say that this version does (Haven't DLed the whole thing yet) But I've never had a problem running standard issue Knoppix in VMWare ..download the ISO, tell VMWare to boot off it, and away you go
Mame currently supports games like King of Fighters 2001 (60mb), Area 51 (which has a 300mb HDD image file) and several other more modern games.
It's true Pac-Man is only a few KB, but if you want to play some of the more current games, you'll appreciate DVD media.
Actually some of the neo-geo roms are huge.. 64 and 128 megs each. MAME also supports a lot of newer games, which are significantly larger than Ms. Pac-Man. MAME also supports some 5000 or so games, so even if they were all less than 256k, that's still much larger than the size of a CD.
'The MoviX project is a series of three different tiny Linux CD distributions containing all the software to boot from a CD and play multimedia files through the MPlayer, the best multimedia player in the Unix world:
Supported formats are all formats supported by MPlayer, most noticeably DivX but more in general any AVI, MPG, QuickTime, MP3, OGG/VORBIS and a few others'.
Karma: Positive (probably because of superiour intellect)
Yes, it is that simple. And if you want to install it on your HD, it is quite easy. Especially compared to getting MAME to work on my Linux box (ARGH). The only downside to Knoppix is that you don't know any more once you are using Linux than before you started. Then again, that could be a plus.
Yes. Emu on CD.
Well, on my laptop dos/windows mame is a lot faster than the linux version. Its a celeron 433 and I can play neo-geo games at full speed under dos or windows but can only manage 15fps using the xview video driver under linux. Of course its probably just the unoptimised trident cyberblade xfree drivers holding performance back. Haven't had time to other methods. Also I have a nice big powerful (at least in comparison!) Athlon desktop system with Radeon 9000 pro. Linux mame rocks in that :-)
Hi everyone, I'm the author of KnoppiXMAME. The file wasn't available yet on ibiblio when I updated the project status on freshmeat. I didn't think it would generate an announcement on the main page, and I certainly didn't think it would be slashdotted!
I've mailed the ibiblio maintainers and am waiting for a response on the status of the ISO file I uploaded about three days ago. In the meantime you can grab the ISO directly from me by opening an ftp session to yummy.dyndns.org. It's only 128K up, so whoever gets it first please put some mirrors up!
- Daniel R. Tarsky
The multi-platform capability is provided by the use of two different cardedge sockets on the base of the unit, and two different adaptors; One fits into any version of sega genesis (US, UK, JAP) and the other fits into any version of super nintendo. I don't know if the units change their language based on the language of what you plug them into.
The top of the unit has two slots, one for super famicom games and one for any type of genesis games. It also comes with an adapter to allow you to plug super nintendo games in. The whole thing runs off an original sega genesis/mega-drive power supply, not the later-model one which also powers the game gear and nomad.
The machine will read MS-DOS formatted 720k and 1.44MB floppies, as well as writing its own format which is somewhat higher-capacity, I seem to recall the high density format being around 1.7 or 1.8MB. If a game will not fit on one disk it will break it up into two equal-size parts. There are assorted utilities around the 'net which I have downloaded which will convert between the most popular emulation formats and the MGH format, and split the files if necessary.
While mine is somewhat damaged (the floppy drive case is, as I said, broken) I would be willing to sell it... for about $300. :) I also have a shitload of game floppies, which it is illegal for me to provide you with, but you can always download illicit rom images and convert them. I can, at least, provide you with the conversion utilities. In any case you can use it (when coupled with the appropriate system) to copy games onto floppies, and then transfer them to your PC; it also makes dandy backup copies of your games. The machine also emulates various forms of SRAM, allowing you to save games to floppy on games which normally have battery-backed memory to save them.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
As far as Knoppix is concerned, this issue was recently discussed on debian-legal list. See the answer from Klaus Knopper. I don't know the details of this modified version, though.
This site www.freemameroms.com lists people willing to burn copies of roms for the cost of shipping + media.
I don't see him now, but a few months ago I saw a guy who offered 30+ DVD-Rs for ~$240 with 109GB of ROMs. That's a lot of roms.
Yeah, I thought a disk drive would be cheaper too.
There are many many sites out there charging US$100 or more for MAME sets. It is in direct response to their actions that the Tombstone Group was formed. Due to some provider problems they were shutdown for a time. To keep the scammers from taking over during their absence, Lazarus and FreeMAMERoms took over.
There maybe other burning groups, these are just the ones I am aware of.
If you want to know what I mean by scammers do a Google for "Emu on CD" for a Brazillian site. (Please don't give them any money)
for cartridge games, you can find a rom dumper do do that. no need to desolder chips or anything. every cartridge system has a dumper made for it. a company named BUNG tends to make a lot of them. I have one of their N64 dumpers, and it works almost flawlessly.. except for needing a few bios flashes due to new protection schemes. note: rom dumpers are apparently semi-legal, but being I was only using it for my personal collection, i'd love to see someone bust me. :)
for CD-based systems (TG-CD, Sega CD, Playstation), you can simply dump iso images of the files using your PC CD-ROM.
fair use is a fun thing. it'll probably be harder to find a rom dumper due to the DMCA, but I'm sure a quick scour of the alt.binaries.emulators newsgroups will pop up a few people selling them.
Mame Rom Burners
But you didn't hear that from me...
~ tmasman
Oh! And this one time, at band camp...
Do NOT, I repeat, do NOT buy any rom collections. Almost without exception, anyone that you might find selling emulator roms is doing so illegally. Especially the dimwits on eBay. Full and complete MAME romsets are available on the net if you look hard enough. There are several highly active newsgroups where complete romsets are posted regularly for almost every system imaginable. I know of at least one IRC channel where a few weeks' worth of downloading can get you just about every game released for every console, computer, and arcade game that existed. (Even a few newer ones like PSX, Dreamcast, and PS2.)
If spending all of your free time downloading isn't your style, then you might look for someone who will burn you a copy of their collection. This is especially prevalient within the online MAME community.
Happy hunting!
Already on the knoppix CD's... but it's not enabled by default. All you have to do is "su - ; apachectl restart", and you're good to go. Play fun games with mount, and make sure you understand what you're doing so you don't get haxored.
--Robert
A kind soul at PlanetMirror is now hosting KnoppiXMAME 1.0. I'll be updating the freshmeat page today.
/ planetmirror.com/pub/knoppixmame/
Here's where you can grab the files:
http://planetmirror.com/pub/knoppixmame/
ftp:/
Share and Enjoy!
- Daniel