How many games you can use with the menu?
There are no limits in the menu program or otherwise in how many roms you can include, so the limit is with the space of the flash card. Considering most NES games are between 25-300kB you could fit 25-300 games on a 64mbit card, 50-600 games on a 128mbit card, 100-1200 games on the 256mbit card, or 200-2400 games on the 512mbit card!
Note that the Gameboy Advance itself can't handle roms over 256mbit, so if you have a 512mbit card you need to split PocketNES up into at least two separate roms.
If you have problems getting a large amount of roms to work, it is most likely that some of them are corrupt, check out the troubleshooting
Also, emulators doesn't seem to be able to use roms over 128mbit, so if you have a large PocketNES rom that won't load on an emulator, chances are it will be fine on a flash card.
Don't forget about the PocketNES emulator for the GBA that allows you to play over 8000 NES games on the GBA in full speed. One 256Mb flash cart can hold over 1000 NES games.
Before the Internet, did you purchase PC parts from Computer Shopper or other mail order companies? Internet orders are probably 100x that of what mail order companies have been doing. It's easy and convienent.
It may be a little larger, but the Pundit case from ASUS is a heck of a lot more stylish and is still smaller than most of the other small form factor cases.
It was to be a simple deal. My brother would fix my truck, needing about $500 in repairs and I would upgrade my nephews PC. I was tempted to just spend a little more and get him a Dell. This way I wouldn't have to deal with the support. Well, my urge to build it myself got the best of me and $1000, 2 years and a HUGE family fight later the PC is still causing me grief!
The next time I need to upgrade a family member's PC, I'll spend a little more and get them a Dell, or some other mass-manufactured PC with support (other than me).
"Designers hope their SoloTrek prototype sells so they can keep the company going. Trek Aerospace has laid off six of its 10 employees and the firm is almost out of cash."
Therefore you'd also need to steal the physical card and make a dupe, so I'm not sure of the potential loss here. Other places where pins are asked for such as online banking may be vunerable however.
What was that movie where the kids figured out how to get the debit card pins from a distance (using some sort of listening device) and then made phoney cards to withdrawl from people's accounts?
It's more like "1450 Hours Free" now. More hours than are in a month so they have to offer 2 free months.
Zendar "There are 10 types of people. Those who understand binary and those who don't"
Wonder when the RedHat forums will be back up. They've been migrating these for about two years as well:
"You may have noticed some trouble logging in and posting issues at the support forums. We are currently migrating content and structure to a new system."
Boy, do I remember. I think it was a per-search fee of $.05. However, they would let you sign up for a free 1 week trial. I just kept signing up with a bogus email address each time (back then, they didn't verify the email addresses).
The pay-per-search didn't last that long and they soon went to banner ads, which were just beginning to gain momentum around that time.
As for my preference, I used Infoseek religously until about mid-2000 when I finally switched to Google.
Railroad Tycoon comes to mind. Where you had to identify the locomotive from the picture. After playing a dozen times or so, you'd be familiar with them and wouldn't need the manual.
Then there was the games that required a word from a randomly chosen page/paragraph. Now _that_ was fun!
How many games you can use with the menu?
There are no limits in the menu program or otherwise in how many roms you can include, so the limit is with the space of the flash card. Considering most NES games are between 25-300kB you could fit 25-300 games on a 64mbit card, 50-600 games on a 128mbit card, 100-1200 games on the 256mbit card, or 200-2400 games on the 512mbit card! Note that the Gameboy Advance itself can't handle roms over 256mbit, so if you have a 512mbit card you need to split PocketNES up into at least two separate roms. If you have problems getting a large amount of roms to work, it is most likely that some of them are corrupt, check out the troubleshooting Also, emulators doesn't seem to be able to use roms over 128mbit, so if you have a large PocketNES rom that won't load on an emulator, chances are it will be fine on a flash card.
Don't forget about the PocketNES emulator for the GBA that allows you to play over 8000 NES games on the GBA in full speed. One 256Mb flash cart can hold over 1000 NES games.
Before the Internet, did you purchase PC parts from Computer Shopper or other mail order companies? Internet orders are probably 100x that of what mail order companies have been doing. It's easy and convienent.
That's where I found out about the case. It seems to be popular with MythTC users.
In any case, it certianly *looks* better than the iWill case.
It may be a little larger, but the Pundit case from ASUS is a heck of a lot more stylish and is still smaller than most of the other small form factor cases.
It was to be a simple deal. My brother would fix my truck, needing about $500 in repairs and I would upgrade my nephews PC. I was tempted to just spend a little more and get him a Dell. This way I wouldn't have to deal with the support. Well, my urge to build it myself got the best of me and $1000, 2 years and a HUGE family fight later the PC is still causing me grief! The next time I need to upgrade a family member's PC, I'll spend a little more and get them a Dell, or some other mass-manufactured PC with support (other than me).
Then why do they charge $120 for existing users (owners) to upgrade to each new point release for OSX?
It's a Segway for the air.
What was that movie where the kids figured out how to get the debit card pins from a distance (using some sort of listening device) and then made phoney cards to withdrawl from people's accounts?
Wasn't this info posted yesterday?
It's more like "1450 Hours Free" now. More hours than are in a month so they have to offer 2 free months. Zendar "There are 10 types of people. Those who understand binary and those who don't"
With the exception of the (rather large) speakers on top, this looks like the same design is the Toshiba e series.
Wonder when the RedHat forums will be back up. They've been migrating these for about two years as well:
"You may have noticed some trouble logging in and posting issues at the support forums. We are currently migrating content and structure to a new system."
Boy, do I remember. I think it was a per-search fee of $.05. However, they would let you sign up for a free 1 week trial. I just kept signing up with a bogus email address each time (back then, they didn't verify the email addresses).
The pay-per-search didn't last that long and they soon went to banner ads, which were just beginning to gain momentum around that time.
As for my preference, I used Infoseek religously until about mid-2000 when I finally switched to Google.
Railroad Tycoon comes to mind. Where you had to identify the locomotive from the picture. After playing a dozen times or so, you'd be familiar with them and wouldn't need the manual.
Then there was the games that required a word from a randomly chosen page/paragraph. Now _that_ was fun!
/Zendar
What about Karataka? Captain Goodnight? Castle Wolfenstein?
One day I brought a few of these to computer class. I left with the 5.25" floppy (not the case mind you, the floppy) stapled to the wall.