• KptnAutismus@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    we’re all going a little crazy, but this is just the right kind of insane. make it run pong with powerpoint controls next please.

    • gregorum@lemm.ee
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      9 months ago

      pfft— 16-bit @ 3Hz and 128k of ram?

      give me Adventure! waiting for each turn to process and refresh would actually give a sense of suspense!

      edit: for reference, Pong on an Atari 2600 ran at 8-bit @ 1.19 MHz w/128b of ram. so 3Hz is barely enough power to process rudimentary logic and text display. Adventure was node-based with a simple language-prompt interpreter. it would be slooooow, but it would have a chance of actually working.

      edit 2: Adventure, (aka ADVENT) was the original text-adventure game:

      This is one that you can really get your teeth into. You travel around an imaginary world, collecting treasure and solving puzzles, all the while making a map on paper so that you have an idea where you are. The control system is fairly simple with just one or two word commands, and once you get the hang of this, it works really well. It is also made easier by certain short-cuts such as just typing, ‘building’ to enter the building.

      The game ADVENT, which adventure is based on, was written on a PDP-10 in FORTRAN by Will Crowther in 1976 and is considered to be the first adventure game. The following year Don Woods expanded the game by adding fantasy elements and making it more puzzle-orientated.

      Originally written by James Gillogly in 1977 as a port of the classic FORTRAN game ADVENT written by Will Crowther and Don Woods.

      (source)

      I actually got to play the original version when I was a student at RIT in the 90s, as the College of Computer Science still had a DEC PDP-10 running a VMS/VAX system that had a copy of Adventure. It was infuriating, and I wasted far too many hours in study hall playing that shit when I should have been learning C++.

      • Kaboom@reddthat.com
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        9 months ago

        Mild correction, 128 bytes of ram, not kilo bytes. Yeah, that thing was somewhat limited.

        • gregorum@lemm.ee
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          9 months ago

          oh, shit, fixed!

          yeah, if extended memory was required, it could be on the cartridge. some Nintendo and Neo-Geo cartridges did this, too.

    • Fuck spez@sh.itjust.works
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      9 months ago

      Everyone? You sure? Just off the top of my head, I’ve witnessed:

      1. A fellow millennial recently calling his tower “the modem”.

      2. A user who thinks a computer experiencing a “crash”, as in the unexpected termination of a process, means everything on the hard drive was just lost.

      3. A teacher who swears their fiber optic internet connection always slows down when it rains.

      4. A family member who thinks cell phones are actually miraculous.

      5. An IT director who decided to save time while rewiring an entire school district’s network by forgoing patch panels completely, terminating hundreds of CAT-6 cables (which he first laid directly on top of the drop ceiling grid) with RJ45 connectors plugged straight into switches, labeling each with masking tape.

      6. A police officer who called his chief and supervisor over to his desk in order to explain that he discovered a massive vulnerability on the agency website, demonstrating the risk by showing them how he was able to change some text with the browser’s element inspector.

      7. A software developer who only used Internet Explorer (years ago when Chrome was still arguably the best option) because “Google tracks you”. He was later sentenced to decades in federal prison for organizing the production of CSAM on the surface web, not the darknet, mostly over Craigslist.

      • vithigar@lemmy.ca
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        9 months ago

        3 is possible if the physical run to your home is in bad shape. I’ve known two people who had weather dependant internet due to that.

        • ikidd@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          Actually, I’d chalk it up to a radio backhaul between the fiber demark and the ISP’s router. Providers do weird shit sometimes.

          But I’d be surprised if getting a fiber connection wet would affect it.

          • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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            9 months ago

            Fiber can be surprisingly resilient to bad connections so if water is getting into a lose connection or very minor break that could be messing with the laser path and increasing the optical loss

      • ikidd@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        The last one bugs me. I keep my mouth shut about my issues with tracking because I fucking hate being a product for corpos, but because child predators avoid it as well, I get looked at like a perv for doing that. Apparently good people do their utmost to remove their privacy in order to avoid such appearances.

      • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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        9 months ago
        1. I’ve been that, only it was “processor”, not “modem”.

        2. I’ve met a guy of the “Windows reinstaller” kind, who thought that you can reformat a hard drive if it has SMART warnings and they’ll go away.

        3. This may not be entirely false, if it rains in a wider area. Say, lots of people use the same infrastructure via wireless connections, and when it rains, their have packets dropped more often etc, sometimes connections interrupted because of this, then even on L3 there’s more actual traffic because of resending packets, even on application level trying to do something many times instead of doing it once. So in the end there’s more load on the same infrastructure, and the connection may be slower even for people connected via fiber. I’m not a network admin so this may look clumsy.

        4. Well, life is less interesting for them than it could be.

        5. Seen too much of similar things.

        6. I’ve been that.

        7. Actual criminals think differently from us, and I’d say there’s an element of evolution to this, so they are likely right and we are likely wrong.

      • Kanda@reddthat.com
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        9 months ago

        Number 4 is kind of correct, but I suspect the family member means it in a magical kind of miraculous?

        • Fuck spez@sh.itjust.works
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          9 months ago

          Right, as in something other than the result of careful research and development. She’s just older and doesn’t have the slightest idea how anything works, habitually trying three different appliances to warm up her coffee when the power goes out before realizing they all need electricity, so it’s all just magic and mystery.

          Then again, it’s people like us who say things like “computers are just rocks we tricked into thinking by putting lightning inside of them” so I don’t not get it.

          • Kanda@reddthat.com
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            9 months ago

            It’s absolutely mind-blowing to me that people discovered how to get electric into homes not 200 years ago and now we have really powerful computers in our pockets.

            No need for fancy stories about rocks and lightning. And the absolute majority of people have no idea how most common household stuff works, because it just werks and you have running water, heating and cooling, refrigerators, hot showers and what not

          • IndefiniteBen@leminal.space
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            9 months ago

            Calling something magic because you’re using that to mean “something made with science beyond my understanding” is definitely different from using it as “this is literally magic made by sorcerers”.

            One is a joke, the other is evidence of the failure of the educational system.

            • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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              9 months ago

              At least it’s a real world demonstration of the concept that sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      I know how to navigate a Windows file system and my 13-year-old daughter doesn’t. So I can still feel superior to someone!

    • Thomrade@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Sadly, Portal64 has come to an end after cease & desist letters were issued to James. Still, it was a fantastic series and he is a great presenter, he makes the technical challenges he faces so Interesting to follow.

      • SatyrSack@lemmy.one
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        9 months ago

        Source? All I see is that Valve kindly asked him to take down the project before Nintendo comes after them for using Nintendo’s proprietary libraries, but the project could hypothetically continue if he switched to an open source library instead.

      • RageAgainstTheRich@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        It really sucks and i wish i had cloned the repo. To me the code was so clean and easily readable, i wanted to look over it more to learn for my own n64 project.

  • gregorum@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    this irrationally infuriates me. (edit: because I hate excel)

    cool work, tho

    • Donjuanme@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      If you enjoy watching 1 frame per x time period sequences, and you’re okay with x being decades, it might “run” doom.

      3hz processing is probably achievable by some humans

    • gordon@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      They say it can’t run DOOM however you can use it to display the video output from DOOM.

  • kozy138@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    Does that make Excel the operating system? Or is it the firmware/BIOS