Microsoft announced today that it's releasing a new app called Windows App as an app for Windows that allows users to run Windows and also Windows apps
Now you just need to find the box with your games. Or Crazy Taxi at least.I found a box with two Dreamcasts
Thankfully, they were in the same box.Now you just need to find the box with your games. Or Crazy Taxi at least.
The 4004 itself is far too limited to run Linux directly. Instead, Grinberg created [...] an emulator that runs on the 4004 and emulates a MIPS R3000 processor
NVIDIA, and by a lot. Not necessarily because they're objectively better, but because they're more universally supported since NVIDIA has something like > 75% market share, and because NVIDIA's DLSS upscaling tech is better (i.e., faster frame rate) than AMD's FSR.I don't know whose drivers are better for performance or compatibility [in gaming, I assume]
Likely due to slight variation in the clock generators of each one that control the chase sequence.I have no idea why.
I would not have expected the difference to be great enough to have them go out of sync over a matter of minutes, but I guess I've never considered how much variance there is in cheap clock generators.Likely due to slight variation in the clock generators of each one that control the chase sequence.
Even a microinfinitesimally slight variance can produce an immense difference these days. DDR4 RAM typically runs anywhere from 2 to 5 ghz. DDR5 is even faster. Even a tiny micropercent difference in cycle length would be compounded literally billions of times per second. Probably not a big enough difference to cause memory errors, but I could easily see it putting a light rotation out of sync within a few minutes.I would not have expected the difference to be great enough to have them go out of sync over a matter of minutes, but I guess I've never considered how much variance there is in cheap clock generators.
Works fine for me. Tested in firefox on an Android.Can a few people do me a favour to test something for me?
I just fiddled around with my website and added a Ko-Fi button. To be clear, I'm not asking for donations. I just want some people to test if the link works and goes directly to my Ko-Fi page. So, on my website, there's a button on the right now. Can you just click on it and see if it goes to my Ko-Fi page? I've never used Ko-Fi before, so making sure it all lines up right.
Tested on the Chromium web browser on Raspberry Pi OS, and it works.Perfect. It's probably working as intended, then. Thank, guys. Now we just need someone to use a weird, outer space Linux operating system and make sure it works on there.
Works on Mac.a weird, outer space Linux operating system
I just tested and that works, too!Soo.... the only thing we haven't tested yet is a regular old windows pc with edge?
Yes.I just tested and that works, too!
What's next? Internet Explorer on a 486? Did the 486 have IE by that point?
I did test that, I just didn't think it would be especially notable, since it's just another Chromium based browser, and those have already been tested repeatedly in this thread.Soo.... the only thing we haven't tested yet is a regular old windows pc with edge?
" Sorry, this post was deleted by the person who originally posted it. "Dude, what did that ASUS ever do to you?
I wish they had included the "after" pics.
--Patrick