Nice work.

Absolutely. I have no doubt about it. And it could look quite nice visually as well smile

How to make a USB Beeper: http://little-scale.blogspot.com/2011/0 … eeper.html

i'm looking forward to 4 months of this thread.

645

(165 replies, posted in General Discussion)

holy shit amazeballs

holy shit

647

(109 replies, posted in Atari)

No, but I think it is always fantastic to see new tools and new toys in the community.

Also, the SAA-1099 boss. A great chip, very simple and nice sound.

648

(109 replies, posted in Atari)

That's awesome.

649

(109 replies, posted in Atari)

Cool! And welcome tongue

650

(1,485 replies, posted in Trading Post)

Awesome!

651

(23 replies, posted in Releases)

Thanks for listening and not hating it, Celsius.

652

(12 replies, posted in Sega)

*shrug*

653

(23 replies, posted in Releases)

Cheers! Glad you liked it big_smile

654

(12 replies, posted in Sega)

Yeah, it looks like a great cart. Personally, I would buy the Everdrive over the Tototek - given the choice. Having said this, I own the Tototek cart and I've been happy with it. Keep in mind that you need a parallel port etc for the Tototek ones.

655

(12 replies, posted in Sega)

You would need an eprom / eeprom / flash programmer to reprogram the chips for my super-simple cart - it's made to just hold a ROM, after all - and not function to be a dev cart proper as such. Perhaps you have one already? If not, it will cost about $80, so it's not a viable alternative just for this.

Otherwise, just go with the Tototek cart...

656

(12 replies, posted in Sega)

This might also be of interest to you: http://www.tototek.com/store/index.php? … ucts_id=67