Emulation Explosion On the PS3 Via Linux
Marty writes "The PlayStation 3 has recently seen an explosion
of releases of emulators and games for the Yellow Dog Linux distro for PS3;
once you have installed Yellow
Dog Linux you then have the ability to try out MAME,
SNES, Amiga, Dos,
Commodore and Atari
emulators (that's the tip of the iceberg) and such games as Quake
2, Duke Nukem 3D, Hexen 2 and Alephone. Time to start installing Linux on your PS3?"
I've been wondering for some time now if I should try and get linux going on the PS3. this sounds like a great place to start.
sigs... don't talk to me about sigs....
Yellow Dog Linux is sooo buggy and is based on the now comparativley ancient Fedora 6, why don't just install Fedora 10 for PPC on the PS3 instead, .
There plenty of emulators in the Fedora repos and Fedora works fine on the PS3.
CN=poolmeister.OU=lurkers.CN=slashdot
Yo, Dawg! I herd you like playin' consoles so I put a console in yo console so you can play while you play!
I now feel somewhat happier.
1. First of all, there are more options for PS3 then YD including Gentoo, Ubuntu, Fedora, and others.
2. Access (due to Sony scared of people making good games for PS3 Linux for 'free') to the RSX (graphics card) is very restricted. A few firmware revisions ago it was accessible but of course that gets fixed. And without the latest firmware, you cannot play certain games.
The PS3 is a flop anyway. If you want to emulate these mentioned systems, you are way better off with a PC, Xbox 1, or Wii.
I'm not a gamer and for the longest time I have been trying to decide if I want to buy a PS3. If only it had more ram.
I cry everytime people don't remember the hardworking folks over at the Freespace SCP when it comes to Linux gaming....
http://scp.indiegames.us/
and
http://www.hard-light.net/forums/index.php
for more info.
Over a million posts in their forum debugging an amazing game.
How's that 3D support for Linux on the PS3 coming along?
The PS3 is a powerhouse of hardware and people want to run old-school emulators on it? Do you have any idea how embarrassing that'll look compared to someone running MSG4? Give us proper use of the PS3 already!
I really can't see a good reason to install Linux on a PS3 except for once again proving that Linux goes on everything with a microchip. I'd rather buy a cheap pc for Linux, and have a working keyboard...
This message was brought to you by Sarcasm and Troll Feeders United (STFU)
Most of those programs worked on the PS3 day one. I am not aware of what makes this a new development.
[20:36] wwwdot/.dotorg
The PS3 is selling at a significantly faster rate than the 200 cheaper Xbox 360.
Even being 200 more expensive the PS3 is absolutely destroying the 360 in both Japan and Europe. It's only in the US right now with the worst economic conditions in a half a decade that people are having trouble spending 400 dollars on a PS3.
What is even more amazing is the PS3 has now gone for almost a year and a half at 400 dollars and it still sold as many consoles worldwide last year as the 200 cheaper 360.
With around 150 million PS2 owners out there in the world it should be obvious what is going to happen when the PS3 gets its price cut in the coming months...
What a massive humiliation for Microsoft that they couldn't manage to outsell a console that is 200 more expensive and cheaper than the Wii worldwide last year. Even worse is those sales numbers include the massive number of 360 owners who have bought 2, 3, 4 or more new consoles hoping to finally get one that is free of the RRoD hardware failure fiasco.
it wants its news back.
What is the point of purchasing the most expensive consoles on the market to play emulator games? This is not news. Linux on the PS3 is news. Seti at home on the PS3 is news. Running an emulator, solitaire or Tux racer on the PS3 is a waste good hardware (unless this is your primary Linux rig).
my mom posts on slashdot.
great idea! let's spend $400 on a system then only use it to play games that are 10 years old,
wow homebrewers keep getting smarter every generation.....
Please name an emulator which works on the PS3 today and didn't in 2007.
"Explosion" implies that there are many such emulators, and that they all showed up recently. In fact, I don't know of any at all, and it's hardly an "explosion" for a Linux system to have access to a bunch of common Linux packages. What next? "Emulator explosion on the Eee" headlines because my specific Eee has access to more emulators than it did when I bought it?
My blog: http://www.seebs.net/log/ --- My iPhone/iPad app: http://www.seebs.net/seebsfrac/
All those fancy cell cores with their gigahertzes and gigaflops, the hdd with its gigabytes and then bluray, just to play a game of Hunt the Wumpus! Hunt in shiny HD ascii!
The reason to put Linux on a PS3 is the same as it has been since release day: access to the wonderfully (sinfully?) complex Cell.
If the thought of 6 128-bit wide vector processors hanging off the back of a general purpose CPU gets you all hot and bothered, the Linux on the PS3 is a great place to start.
"Upon attaching the waterblock to my penis, I began to notice that I know nothing about computers." -- JRockway
...the result of the PS3 ripping a hole through space-time to steal games from the 90s. Awesome games, but you can do more with a smaller budget on a conventional PC and it doesn't doesn't lock you out of the hardware or software.
Emulation Explosion On the PS3 Via Linux
So is 2009 the Year of Linux on PS3?
Eclipse PDE and Me
Why would I want to play 9 year old+ games on a new entertainment system? I mean really quake 2 haha and Atari hum I played that in 1978. Yeah I could not wait 31 years for Sony to make the PS3 so I could play those games again. Oh and maybe in the U.S. XBOX is king but PS3 rules in Europe. Can anyone say CODE FREE!
Had a PS3 recently, hooked it up with ubuntu, ppc-codecs to play RMVB. Output straight to your HD LCD. Rendering is quite slow on 1080p. Faster at lower resolution.
Yes, I want to emulate explosions on my PS3.
It strikes me that people who try to hype up the PS3's emulation under linux have never tried it.
I have, ignoring the large amount of tweaking to get a distro working properly with the PS3 hardware/HDTV (I've tried yellow dog and ubuntu), the emulation just isn't very good.
At least with an NES emulator you'll be able to run a game at full speed. However, good luck getting it fit to the screen properly or get it working with PS3 gamepad (again more tweaking). Other systems, SNES, GENESIS, don't have an emulator that is going to run at full speed on the PS3.
Other software suffers from the same problems, lack of selection and slow performance. Maybe this will change in the future, but right now linux on the cell isn't that great for desktop style apps. Yet I see it hyped up all the time, but people who either haven't bothered to try it, or are fine with a lot of tweaking for a extremely sluggish emulation/desktop experience. Just because you can do it, doesn't always mean that it is worth doing.
I've recently been looking at putting together a small pc to use as a media player / dvr. So far the price is coming up a little below a PS3. Because of this I'm thinking about getting a PS3 instead. So, I have two questions here for people who have a PS3 and have put Linux on it.
Sooo...time to start working on a ps3 emulator for linux for ps3?
Please point out the firmware versions that allowed RSX access, and how. I've been searching regularly for years and have never found such a claim, much less proof.
Even "cheap" PC GPU's can blow away the PS3 in terms of FLOPS
One thing the PS3 can do that cheap PC GPUs can't is output video to an SDTV without a $50 adapter.
and they cost a fraction of what a PS3 does.
I don't understand. Both a PC and a PS3 cost roughly $400. Besides, you usually need a separate PC, a separate monitor, and a separate copy of the game for each player, which doesn't always work that well when you have friends or relatives over.
I think you are confusing actual research with ...
Then sit back down and shut up while you think about it. While you're sitting there, ostensibly thinking, here is some material to consider:
Garbage products like xbox have gone down in flames (pun intended) and MS has to make smoke (no pun intended) and noise to distract from the situation. Same crowd is going on attack against OpenOffice.org and other key products. The universal office format, OpenDocument Format, is getting specialized attackers. Repeat lies often enough that people believe them seems to be an ongoing theme from MS.
Whether 1-, 8-. 16, or 32-node clusters, PS3s are useful in computationally intensive tasks. I'd like to see an add-on for Blender or other 3D software that allows adding a PS3 as a single node cluster. If it's there and you're working with a desktop, why not also use the processors of the otherwise idle gaming machine
Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
Who wants to play Quake 2 when you can play Killzone 2?
I like traffic lights
Free online play (no subscription BS)
Until Sony shuts a game's matchmaking servers down, and attempts to connect fail with "DNAS Error -103: This software title is no longer in service." I've bought two games for Sony consoles with online capabilities (Frequency and Dance Dance Revolution Supernova), and both of them failed this way the the first time I tried them. It's thought that paid matchmaking servers of Xbox Live Gold will last longer because Microsoft has a bigger economic incentive not to shut them down.
You think that is great? Get a big screen TV and play Super Mario Bros. 3 on big world.
Oh God, the pixels, the pixels are coming to get me!!!!
It depends on which emulator you're using. If you're using the official Virtual Console emulator, it'll look blocky because vcNES uses nearest-neighbor resampling. But if you're using an emulator that supports Scale2x, hq2x, or some other smart resampling method for line art, you can get NES games to look better than TG16 in some cases and Super NES games to look nearly PS1-quality.
*obligatory eye-roll*
What's the value of information that you don't know?
Just thought I'd add to this discussion:
http://gizmodo.com/363985/air-force-buys-300-playstation-3-for-research
This came out about a year or so ago.
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=air+force+research+laboratory+ps3&aq=0&oq=
They did this because the comparative price was a bargain.
http://militarytimes.com/forums/showthread.php?p=88652
http://www.militarytimes.com/news/2008/03/airforce_playstation_031308/
I have to get back to work now.
get on the train, lets see how many generations we can increase.
I know its nice to run linux on stuff just because it can but seriously for the average user that isnt just trying to poke around at the cell processor, they would be better off getting a cheap hand me down pc.
As soon as I can play my PS2 games on a PS3, I might look into buying one.
A memory card adapter can easily be made from an Xbox controller pigtail and a USB extension cable
Google how to make an xbox memory card adapter found this, but a lot of people can't be bothered to learn to solder.
However, there are forums where you can find someone to help you (or do it for you for a fee) all over the country.
I tried xbox soft-mod service indiana on Google but didn't see anything relevant. What keywords should I have tried instead?
All the answers are out there, an intelligent person could spend two or three minutes and get them all.
One problem is that some of the resources about soft-modding are outdated (e.g. Version 1.6 Warning). Some people who are otherwise intelligent don't have the specific knowledge about how to tell if a given tutorial is up-to-date or out-of-date. For instance, the first result from Google xbox soft-mod is from May 16, 2004. What kind of query would one use to ask "Has anything about Xbox soft-modding changed since May 2004"? Or would that be more of a "sign up on a forum" thing?
For the record I'd like to state the following: Sony are selling the PS3 at a price comparable to a fully compliant Blu-Ray player (the new de facto HD standard) with the ability to automatically update itself with new firmware when available / necessary to continue supporting updated standards. They also threw in a fully network aware media player that can connect to numerous digital sources (online and in the home) to provide full video, audio and pictoral entertainment without the need for third-party software and/or hardware. Then they throw in the ability to install a world-wide standard freely distributed operating system which gives you access ot a whole host of free software, including emulators of various retro consoles and arcade machines. Oh yeah, they used standard USB connections to facilitate usage, and allow connection of a mouse and keyboard. But wait, you say - didn't they add something else? Oh yeah, a fully up to date new generation gaming machine that can play HD gaming content with 7.1 surround sound, while still allowing you to play your old PS1 content without needing yet another box hanging around making your living room untidy. And of course, they fail to sting you with monthly subscriptions just in order to play online games you already bought... Bad, Bad Sony... Quit bitching people. You're buying a media center with a free console added for fun (and the kids). ffs. [my views are not those of the company which employs me and they are not to be held responsible for any comments herein]
This was cool 5 years ago when I did it on my softmodded XBox, which it should be noted actually has access to the video card and thus has performance on par with the PS3 (if not better), even with a measly 64mb ram.
Similes are like metaphors
Your $50 PC isn't pumping 2 TFLOPS.
Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
Buy the 80GB model, which does allow you to play PS2 games, natively as they added the hardware.
Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
I want a PS3 emulator on my PC so I can play PAIN, http://pain.us.playstation.com/default.aspx
PAIN rocks!
You forgot the best reason ever to install linux and run emulators: playing Oregon Trail on an Apple ][e emulator! Hint: it's and EXCELLENT drinking game.
You wouldn't have the same emotion
...he hasn't been in junior college for ten years ^_^
Um, early (4 USB port) 80G model was software only, then (2 USB port) no PS2 backward compatibility.
Wikipedia(link below) lists the following PS2 compatibility on the PS3:
(PS1 seems to be software on all of them)
Hardware:
20 G NTSC
60 G NTSC
Software:
60 G PAL
80 G NTSC (4 USB port models)
None:
40 G PAL or NTSC
80 G PAL or NTSC (2 USB port models)
160 G PAL or NTSC
Looking at this chart, any 4 USB port model has some backwards compatibility with PS2 games, and the 2 ports have none. (Sony's FAQ page listing which ones are backwards compatible and what not(US NTSC list.)
Personally, I want a 60G NTSC model because: 4 USB ports, Flash card reader, 802.11b/g WiFi, hardware backwards compatibility (At least one title(according to the compatibility checker) I have seems to have problems when software emulated versus hardware, play with Sony's compatibiltiy checker). And you can always upgrade the hard drive yourself. (At least everything I've read seems to list that as a standard user option)
The actual 80GB PS3 weighs 2kg more because there's actua PS2 hardware inside. It was not software emulation, otherwise every console would have had it installed. It was a purely hardware cost.
Just FYI I've taken my 80GB apart and physically compared it with my friend's 60GB model. There is more hardware in the 80GB model, plus you can see the old Emotion Engine processor sitting right above the main SPU array.
Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
XBOX 360 has no issues with these upgrades and plays more games than any of the consoles could ever play combined!!!!!
Everything I've read has said that the 80G models that do PS2 emulation do it in software.
Some say that Sony pulled the EE+GS chip out and do everything in software, other things I've read said it(80G models w/ BC) have a modified PS2 GS chip in it, so it is doing some in hardware, some in software.
In any case, the models currently in production don't have any official PS2 BC compatibility listed.
"Time to start installing Linux on your PS3?"
Since you asked: No.