Yes we all do. So why don't you write a decoder for the PS2, and a tool for writing the decoder and the data to a cd/dvd-disk. I would use it! Couldn't be that much overhead.
Or better yet, ext2 -> auto. Then you can also boot older kernels thant don't understand ext3. This could be useful right now, when your brand new kernel is broken.
Yes we all do. So why don't you write a decoder for the PS2, and a tool for writing the decoder and the data to a cd/dvd-disk. I would use it! Couldn't be that much overhead.
Or better yet, ext2 -> auto. Then you can also boot older kernels thant don't understand ext3. This could be useful right now, when your brand new kernel is broken.
SAL is a good resource for finding science apps that run on Linux. Worldwide mirrors, many apps are free.