81

(164 replies, posted in General Discussion)

I heart IAYD

DaPantz wrote:

I'm happy to see some high quality on there, but glomag released two absolute masterpieces that were impeccably received upon release from everyone...

83

(223 replies, posted in Collaborations)

Damn I can't hear the song at work, but you have some lovely moves!

PULSELOOPER wrote:
Sabrepulse wrote:

I do this with a windows copy of ableton live 8 (alas, I only have 6 for mac native) and famitracker. Works with old-ish games and most music applications..

well, this is great, cos when I tried crossfire a couple of years ago (early days of mac and desperate-searching for windows solution for it), crossfire couldn't even run photoshop. Great to know it runs ableton for windows! Gonna give it a shot.

but anyway, parallels still work for me for dingoo file-managing and lsdj cart transfer smile

i've been very impressed with it so far, it's very useful.

I'm not sure what gameboy carts you have, but this native mac usb cart manager works a treat

http://thretris.blogspot.com/2009/12/ho … acosx.html

Milky resizes perfectly on my mbp 13", you need to go into the options and change the resolution.

Also, parallels is the long way round getting windows apps emulated on a mac: use crossfire http://www.codeweavers.com/products/cxmac/ - you can run windows programs within osx without having to install/boot a copy of windows. Click on the .exe you want to run and away you go. I do this with a windows copy of ableton live 8 (alas, I only have 6 for mac native) and famitracker. Works with old-ish games and most music applications.

since getting crossfire i've barely touched my windows 7 bootcamp on the same machine, it's that good!

A large majority of applications billed as 'mac native' are actually windows applications with a mac 'wrapper' (read: virtual machine emulation). This is true of most current videogames which are supposedly 'ported' to the mac. So what you're kinda doing with crossfire is doing the port yourself.

86

(274 replies, posted in General Discussion)

@sabrepulse

87

(38 replies, posted in General Discussion)

akira^8GB wrote:

You are a chiptuner? I have a Subaru Impreza that needs chip tuning, send me a mail.

same old shit, different place eh akira?

i vote for all you ladies who are moaning about wanting to go so badly to pool together and work something out. This is going to be of Blip proportions (without the cold weather)

89

(9 replies, posted in Trading Post)

hey i'm heading out to ny next month and would be interested in picking this up if still available - if not good luck with the sale, cheers

90

(31 replies, posted in Nintendo Handhelds)

I honestly don't care, when it's hungry I feed it

91

(52 replies, posted in Trading Post)

would you put a price on this? interested!

92

(35 replies, posted in Nintendo Handhelds)

this is just getting insane now

93

(18 replies, posted in General Discussion)

rumpelfilter wrote:

@arottenbit: yeah gameboy... have been thinking about it... but I must admit that I'm a bit tired of the sound...

Put the time in, and you can make music that sounds nothing like a gameboy!

94

(18 replies, posted in General Discussion)

gwEm wrote:

try an Atari ST, its dead easy to load software on it - no need to build anything

i've wanted to try your dj software since watching the workshop at blip07, one of these days....!

i'm hoping for xinon or sulumi but it's never going to happen, i'll take portalenz/hally/q330 as consolation tongue

96

(74 replies, posted in General Discussion)

akira^8GB wrote:

DJ Scotch Egg is another one you want to see.

becuase he goes beyond the chip scene, seeing him at a gabba/breakcore night it's refreshing to see someone doing it through a different medium.