Golfshrine update! A few fun things in unusual packages, and a one particularly notable one that entices me to do some extra unwarranted infodumping. https://netizen.club/~wildweasel/updates.html
I was reading this and was like ha ha, that's great, you go little nonprofit activist organization! And then later I scrolled by it again and my eyes actually focused and it clicked who had posted it https://ec.social-network.europa.eu/@EUCommission/112710674773518658
The "Pay or Consent" advertising model of Meta fails to comply with the Digital Markets Act.
Our preliminary findings show that this choice forces users to consent to the combination of their personal data and fails to provide them a less personalised but equivalent version of Metaβs social networks.
More info β
https://europa.eu/!yjjm9k
@mcc somewhere, one of my two 3DS systems has a copy of "Garfield's Fun Fest" in the game card slot, that I barely remember getting let alone why. It doesn't really need to use that slot anymore so why not
@mcc couldn't be bothered to build my own so i'm just keeping the placeholder card in the slot where one goes
Do/Have you used a CD/DVD/Bluray in a while?
What about burning a disk?
I'm surveying modern day awareness/usage of optical media, mostly to confirm some demographic theories, so if you know what a CD/DVD is, please help me (and maybe others) out by answering some ~10 questions here:
https://optical-media-survey.benjojo.co.uk/
And then please boost for better visibility! Thank you!
This just popped into one of my feeds - I think that it's a great story about a someone meeting the man.
And now the nominations for "things that look more unrealistic than CGI" https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/videos/cv2grqz2vgro
Following up on the Amstrad 386 laptop restoration
https://tech.lgbt/@nina_kali_nina/112691249304838992
We've probed the VGA card all around, and even suspected one of the chips to be dead... But as it turns out, our tinkering made the card working. "Have you tried disassembling and assembling it back" approach, with thorough washing from the corrosion, helped.
The complication with the debugging was caused by the fact that VGA D-SUB works only when turned on from DOS.
The LCD screen looks much better in person than on the photo. The shades of grey on it are quite remarkable. So far it is the second most readable monochrome screen I have, second only to Playdate.
A new little restoration project.
We have computers with 8086, 188, 286, 486, P1, P2 and P3 at home, but we didn't have a 386 machine. I saw a listing of an Amstrad 386 laptop that got me curious: there were photos of a working greyscale LCD, and the seller said they recapped the board, but couldn't quite make it fully work still, so it was sold for cheap as "parts".
On arrival the screen was not working, and the computer insisted that something was wrong. The keyboard was dead, hard drive was dead, and even a poor floppy drive inside was dead. Video card had signs of corrosion. The computer has one ISA slot, and it boots when there's an external video card and a keyboard. The floppy drive cabling hasn't standard, but it was easy to cut some tracks and solder two bodge wires to make it work. Now we can boot into DOS.
Internal video is going to be an interesting fix. After washing, VGA BIOS seems to be working, but there's no video signal generated. Thankfully there's a schematic, and it's "simple".
You can tell when a computer is thinking rapidly because it goes clickclickclickclickclick really fast. You may notice computers stopped doing this around 2007, that's because that was when they got fast enough they didn't have to think anymore. Since 2007 all computers have just sort of been phoning it in. That's why you buy a more powerful computer every five years but they never *feel* like they get any faster: Loafing
He/him. Puzzle-Adventure Hybrid with RPG Elements. Supports 3D Acceleration. He Is Essentially What He Believes. Just in case, π, LGBTQ+ π, DOS π, ππ©π.
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