As most regular readers will probably know, I’ve got a thing for low powered devices. In my daily work life, I build clusters with them and write/run scientific computing and visualization software on them. At home though, I’ve got a thing for game consoles, emulation, and USB. I’ve especially got a thing for getting people playing games or running consoles on unusual systems that they would have never thought to use. I think the Zipit and IM-ME communities are fairly well aware of this already. What amazed me though, is how few people I found seriously discussing the idea of using a pogoplug device as a game or emulation console. Allow me to get the conversation started with a bang.

For those with web ADHD:
tl;dr – Using a Dockstar and a DisplayLink adapter in tandem for gaming works incredibly well not just as an emulation console, but as a general purpose desktop as well, watch the video below for a multitude of console and PC gaming goodness. I show it running

  • Scummvm (Monkey Island 3)
  • NES (Contra)
  • Doxbox (Warcraft)
  • Mednafen–
  • Lynx (Lemmings)
  • GBA (Aria of Sorrow)
  • GBC (Lufia)
  • GB (Links Awakening)
  • TurboGrafx (Bonk 3)
  • NeoGeo Pocket (Last Blade)
  • Wonderswan (Guilty Gear Petite 2)
  • stella 2600 (Adventure)
  • VisualBoyAdvance (Mario World)
  • SuperTux
  • Abuse – Actually this was cut for time in the youtube clip but it plays perfectly.
  • Wesnoth
  • yabuase Sega Saturn (Sonic Extreme)
  • Quake 3 (OpenArena)

Most with the exception of Saturn and OpenArena run at full playable speed with sound and full or near fullscreen graphics. I have no reason to believe SNES or even Mame and Playstation are out of the picture, with some cleverness. There is so much more below.

For everyone else, read on for photos, configuration files, tips, tricks, explanations, and a thorough walkthrough of the process.

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First thanks to everyone who applied for beta status over at Discursive Labs. Your name is on the list and we’ve got an extra secret upcoming project that will be landing in your inbox soon :) . If anyone else is interested in becoming a beta tester, send us an email with “beta” in the subject line and we’ll get you on the list.

Also, on a completely separate note we’ve got another technology preview with an upcoming public beta called Sliders (beta). It’s a graphical, dynamically updating equation solving, graphing, and sharing application written in HTML5 and gRaphael. Preview it over at the Discursive Labs corporate blog.

Sliders (beta)

 

For those of you who are not on beta list over at Discursive Labs, this is the sort of thing you are missing out on. If you follow our corporate blog over at www.discursivelabs.com, you know that Source Tree Visualizer is an entirely new way to interact and understand the complexities of source control in a meaningful, intuitive way. Rooted in the most current research in computer graphics and visualization, Source Tree Visualizer may literally change the way you think about your source tree forever. Head on over to the Source Tree Visualizer media page and find out how Discursive Labs is bringing you a whole new kind of source tree visualization.

 

Ideas are wonderful things. They can inspire us to work harder, dream harder, live harder. The ideas we have, these are free. Servers cost money. Health insurance costs money. Employees, computers, conference rooms, software licenses, these things cost money. Big time. So when you’re looking to nurture an idea into a business, these costs can seem daunting. For those not interested in (or who have no opportunity for) traditional funding methods such as angel investing and bank loans, how do you actually accumulate the funds necessary to really free your idea? This is the question I asked myself in late 2008. Flash forward to 2010. I’m the CEO of a (becoming successful) startup, completely bootstrapped. How did I go from cubicle worker (and part time hacker) to CEO (and full time hacker)?

front cover

Read on for the exciting preamble and the free E-book download of “Live for Free – The Chronicles of a Nerd Saving for a Startup”

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