Java On Dreamcast Forges On 181
Anonymous Coward writes: "Yup, much to my disbelief, it looks like Planetweb are still determined to try and profit off of the dc with their new DC browser version 3.0. According to the site, 'Users will now be able to access the multimedia features on Web sites using Java and play games written in that language..." I'v given up all hope on the DC, but maby a few of you out there...." Since these are officially EOL (even if not completely out of stores), you might be able to pick up your next web-browsing toy at a yard sale.
Games? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Games? (Score:1)
Re:Games? (Score:1)
The CNN story says you can buy the browser on Amazon too; I couldn't find it though.
Re:Games? (Score:1)
"MVS/JCL running on a Nokia Cell Phone!"
On a side note, this can't be too bad: I've LONG been using Craftsman flathead screwdrivers for pry bars, chisels and wedges... If it'll take the punishment and it'll save you a few bucks, I don't see why not...
Re:Games? (Score:1)
That's funny coming from an Amiga guy.
I wished that my pc could play games as
cool as the Amiga.
Re:Games? (Score:1)
Amiga made two systems which were intended for use as game consoles but which were really just normal amigas in a different case, and with a CD. Sega could easily have made a PC out of the DC, especially with the availability of wince for the system. It's unfortunate that the [DC] system didn't ship with any kind of sizable storage, as it would have made a dandy PC-lite, with wince and some sort of light office suite.
Linux on dreamcast? (Score:1)
Re:Linux on dreamcast? (Score:4, Informative)
And there's already a Linux project going on. Google is your friend.
Re:Linux on dreamcast? (Score:1)
Re:Linux on dreamcast? (Score:2)
Re:Linux on dreamcast? (Score:1, Informative)
http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/dreamcast/
http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/dreamcast/faq.html
AFAIK, the Linux/DC port doesn't have the driver support like the NetBSD code base, especially the broadband NIC. Want to put cross-platform development on your resume? Buy a DC and hack NetBSD!!!
Props to Marcus Comstedt and Jason Thorpe for most of the work regarding the DC/NetBSD port. I have learned a ton from being on the mailing list for this port.
-LOS
cat-at-panther-recordings-dot-com
Re:Linux on dreamcast? (Score:1)
DreamCast For Sale (Score:1)
Re:DreamCast For Sale (Score:1)
*ahem* apart from GT3 (which is just GT2 with new graphics) what else have you got thats decent??? Dont count games that are to be released like Metal Gear, but real games out now?? Hard isnt it??
Virtua Tennis, Shenmue, PSO, Jet Set Radio, Daytona 2000 and of course Samba D'Amigo!
Just watch and see Sega show everyone how games should be made, especially EA.....
I got both of the 2 machines and the DC has the best games by far. Sega have always produced the most innovative and fun games out there (well at least on console). They have always been a games who have just happened to build hardware and now it aint so.....
Even though its been out for a while now, the PS2 is an arse to program and really isnt that powerful. Nothing that the DC couldnt handle *if* they ported the game over.....dont believe me? DOA2, same same same.
Problem with the PS2 is that it has suffered from what helped contribute to the death of the DC, timing. The releases of Gamecube and X-Box will have raised the stakes again and have leapfrogged PS2 in terms of performance.
Plus for developers the new machines are far easier to develop on, I have heard from developer friends that Nintendo development kit is sweet and well, DirectX for the X-Box no?
The PS1 sold shit loads due to superb advertising, good timing and a degree of luck. This time round it wont have it all its own way....though to be honest I am so looking forward to further Shenmue episodes on the PS2
Po
PS2 vs DC (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:PS2 vs DC (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:PS2 vs DC (Score:1)
The majority of DC games render a full frame even when runing at 60Hz(NTSC) (50Hz(PAL)). This is then filtered to produce each interlaced field. The result is a better looking image since, in effect, it is a form of antialiasing.
OTOH it appears that, due to the lack of available video memory, many PS2 60Hz games only use field rendering which effectively halves the resolution.
Simon
Re:PS2 vs DC (Score:1)
Re:PS2 vs DC (Score:2)
Re:PS2 vs DC (Score:1)
Re:PS2 vs DC (Score:1)
But then, sadly, it is moderated up as "Insightful." The grand rule of Slashdot forums is "Advocacy of something popular is considered trolling. Advocacy of the #2 underdog is considered a breath of fresh air."
Re:PS2 vs DC (Score:1, Flamebait)
Oh great wise one, enlighten your poor disciplies. What term should we use to describe PS2 games? Sub-optimal? Differently excellent?
Because, by and large, they do suck. Or so I think, and I don't think DC game suck. How do you want me to put that so as not to offend your delicate sensibilities?
Re:PS2 vs DC (Score:2)
I have to say though, the PS2 is starting to suck less and less. I got one when it first came ut (actually my roomate did) and I have to say I didn't have a lot of fun with the games I had. When my roomate left he took the PS2 with him and I thought big deal. But recently there have been games coming out that I actually want to play.
Contrast that with the DC I just got (so I could code for it) now that I've played it I'm sorry that I didn't get one sooner, the games I have for it so far are just plain fun. Of course, had I bought one when it first came out I may have had the same experience that I had with the PS2, in fact I remember looking at the available game for DC when it came out and I wasn't interested in the least.
Re:PS2 vs DC (Score:2)
That's maybe a sign the developers are finally getting their head round it. My game developer chums certainly weren't impressed with it when it first appeared, but cognitive dissonance has kicked in and they now view the pain they went through as a purifying process... now their POWAHS are complete... ;-)
Re:PS2 vs DC (Score:2)
Re:PS2 vs DC (Score:1)
The other problem with your argument is that the PS2 hasnt been out for months, it has been out for over 18months!!!! Launched in Feb/May 2000 in Japan. And we are still being promised some of the launch titles (Metal Gear??). Face it, the machine is expensive and hard to program. The quality and quantity of games shows this.....
Po
Re:PS2 vs DC (Score:1)
The grand rule of Slashdot forums is "Advocacy of something popular is considered trolling. Advocacy of the #2 underdog is considered a breath of fresh air."
Nice try. The only grand rule of Slashdot is that advocating anything non-Open Source is a troll (and god forbid it be a M$ product). That's it, plain and simple.
PS2 prettier, hah! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:PS2 prettier, hah! (Score:1)
Re:PS2 vs DC (Score:1)
Sega make the best games (well innovative anyway) and already their announcement to publish on all major platforms has shit EA up bigtime. Remember the 2 parted company years ago and Sega's sports titles are *so* good compared to the new lick of paint that EA slap on each year for the Nth+1 version....
Po
All Hope is not lost (Score:1, Interesting)
In a related story... (Score:2, Funny)
It's gone too far! (Score:1)
Pur-lease... (Score:1)
PlanetWeb is still missing an important feature... (Score:2)
Of course most of my collection is OGG now, anyway. How about some clever
Re:PlanetWeb is still missing an important feature (Score:2)
There's the Blaze MP3 player, which is commercial, plus some free ones. Head over to DC Copy World [dccopyworld.com] (although they seem to be down at the moment?), to find out about the free ones, just google search for the Blaze...
Re:PlanetWeb is still missing an important feature (Score:2)
Re:PlanetWeb is still missing an important feature (Score:2)
Re:PlanetWeb is still missing an important feature (Score:2)
The real web appliance (Score:4, Interesting)
Throw that together with the fact that it's about 80 bucks brand new and tell me what you really have to complain about...?
Re:The real web appliance (Score:1)
Doesn't have a hard drive... :-(
Re:The real web appliance (Score:2)
Besides, just NFS mount your drives.
Re:The real web appliance (Score:1)
By your definition. Maybe that's why web appliances never caught on.
Besides, just NFS mount your drives.
Which means you still need a hard drive somewhere, and a connection between them.
Sure, for just web browsing, you don't need a hard drive. But it would be nice to store MP3s and playlists locally without having to burn a CD every time. Save email locally and edit new emails without having to connect to the 'net.
But I'd settle for a USB adapter for my Dreamcast.
DC prices (Score:1)
Dreamcast--
$79.99 new, with no games
100 new, with 3 sports games
59.99 "refurbished" but they were out of refurbished
54.99 used
Re:The real web appliance (Score:3, Insightful)
Second best (to PS2) crisp TV-resolution graphics too. Why can't TV-out video cards ever be that good? All I want is a 720x586 full-frame mode...
Re:The real web appliance (Score:1)
Re:The real web appliance (Score:1)
Despite the rumors? Try loading slashdot's frontpage from a modem sometime, even THAT is painful, and it's not that big. With more and more sites employing flash and java these days, the modem is going the way it should go - Directly into the waste bin.
Re:The real web appliance (Score:1)
Re:The real web appliance (Score:3, Funny)
...cool, but in no way practical/useful
...better than nothing, but tv resolution sucks for the web (also european browser is v. crappy, us one prob. better)
...if you're prepared to shell out $150 on ebay for a BBA ($150! For an ethernet card!)
...if you already have a pc to d/l or rip your mp3s and burn them onto cd
agreed
Jet Set Radio Future is an xbox exclusive
Broadband (Score:1)
Re:Broadband (Score:4, Insightful)
Unfortunately, broadband never really took off on the DC. The "broadband adapter" (a modified version of a Realtek ethernet card) is supported by a grand total of six games. Not to mention that SEGA only sold them for about three months, and now they go on eBay for $120+.
Yeah, it's cool to play with Linux on them, but don't you already have 5 computers in various states of disrepair running Linux/BSD? I know I do...
Despite all this, the DC is/was a great console. Its library of titles whips the PS2 and probably will until at least the middle of next year...and it has a thriving homebrew community [boob.co.uk].
Re:Broadband (Score:1)
I do have a bunch of computers laying around. But, my Sega isn't in disrepair, I can browse with it. (My amps also go to 11.)
I guess it's the same reason I bought an Alpha MB on Ebay. Just to have one running, because I can.
Re:Broadband (Score:2)
Heh, me too.. I remembered ordering one earlier this year and wondering if I'd actually ever receive it (I ordered it along with a few other things, as I recall, Sega shipped everything but the Broadband adapter, and I eventually called out of concern, only to have the rep on the other end of the line attempt to restore my faith.. thankfully, it did come).
It's REALLY too bad Sega turned what was an otherwise awesome toy into a concrete brick by doing that BIOS tweak in later models (including mine, unfortunately) that disabled CD-R usability.. [sigh] I'd have liked to have seen NetBSD or Linux running on this thing. =(
Re:Broadband (Score:1)
Yes, (well, 8 actually, at last count
Lotsa stuff on Dreamcast (Score:3, Interesting)
There already is linux running on the DC, with MAME, running Doom even (imagine that! an emulated game on a physical machine!) checkout this site [dcemulation.com] for lots of information and useful stuff.
Long live the dreamcast!!!
Re:Lotsa stuff on Dreamcast (Score:1)
What the hell else is an emulated game supposed to run on?
Nostalgia.
DC Browser (Score:1)
Hard Drive? (Score:5, Funny)
Wow. I must of missed that feature when I bought my Dreamcast.
I wasn't aware the Dreamcast's HITACHI PROCESSOR wasn't a factor in running Netscape or Internet Explorer. Gee, the AMOUNT OF RAM doesn't seem to be an issue either. Or OPERATING SYSTEM support for that matter! The only issue blocking the use of these other browsers seems to be the lack of a sufficiently-large hard drive!
Well shit, if that's the case, I'm going to upgrade mine!
*pops open Dreamcast*
Err...Where's the old one?
Re:Hard Drive? (Score:1)
Re:Hard Drive? (Score:1)
Re:Hard Drive? (Score:1)
Or OPERATING SYSTEM support for that matter!
Afaik, Dreamcast's os is Windows CE. So, most likely there's port of atleast IE for it, most likely netscape too.
But harddrive ... Does it even have a harddrive ? =)
Re:Hard Drive? (Score:2, Insightful)
1) Build their own
2) Use Sega's low-level OS (named IIRC Dragon)
3) Use Windows CE
Re:Hard Drive? (Score:1)
Dreamcast does not have a built-in OS. The OS comes on the CD with the game (or whatever).
That means the developer has a choice of using Sega's native OS or Windows CE. Sega's OS gives the developer better access to the hardware for (potentially) better graphics and using CE makes it (potentially) easier to port Windows games. At least, that's the theory.
Re:Hard Drive? (Score:1)
This is very important as price points are crucial when it comes to selling consoles
Po
Sega DC operating systems (Score:3, Informative)
1) Shinobi - the official Sega "OS". It's really
just a mixed low/high level API. Not an OS.
2) Dragon - WinCE for DC. This is crap. Few
people ever used it, though it was the first
winCE with direct-x.
3) Linux - it runs all right.
4) KallistiOS, it's turning back into a library now.
I've got the DC dev kit, and by FAR the Sega API is the best and easiest to use.
Re:Sega DC operating systems (Score:1)
It would be interesting to port SDL [libsdl.org] to Dreamcast, though probably useless at this point.
Re:Sega DC operating systems (Score:1)
Re:Hard Drive? (Score:1)
odd that this comes up... (Score:2, Interesting)
i plan to setup nfs so i can mount up user space, no more reburning cd after cd, i did manage to make my cd read cd-rw's, email me if you would like to know
i plan on giving licq and xchat a shot on cross compiling, but this could be nasty... unless licq has a gtk plugin? which i think it does now... i dont want to spend umpteen hours cross compiling qt...
i will send binaries with all dependencies included to the respective sites if i get any of it to work... so far the cd has worked like a dream for me...
oh also, i plan on eventualy making a dc-quake-howto... basicaly howto pop in a cd with enough standalone linux to run quake... this has many possibilities for other linux games that you can now pass onto your windows friends who own a dc
Re:odd that this comes up... (Score:1, Informative)
oh also, i plan on eventualy making a dc-quake-howto... basicaly howto pop in a cd with enough standalone linux to run quake... this has many possibilities for other linux games that you can now pass onto your windows friends who own a dc
Erm, why not just run the dc version of QuakeIII? Possibly faster than running it via Linux...
Life in it yet (Score:4, Informative)
Some people have been asking, why Java? What's the point? The Dreamcast is dead!. In answer: lots of people still use their DC, so the more support, the better. More generally though, the DC is still a nice piece of kit.
As a gaming platform of course, the Dreamcast's days are numbered - it won't be long before the rate of release of new games declines to a trickle. Not that that should stop anyone from enjoying the many fine games already released of course!
Yet with the very low cost of the DC now, if you can find one, and the very wide distribution of information on the console, it has become a perfect, cheap platform for experimenting with embedded programming, or console game development, or even for trying out non-x86 based Unixes. Remeber that there is a version of BSD and Linux available.
The so-called 'coders cable' can provide connectivity for development, but for high speed access there is the official broadband adapter (hard to find and pricey). If you're feeling brave there has been some talk about the viability of a USB-Controller port adapter. The Maple Bus (used to connect the controllers) has been well documented [mc.pp.se].
An earlier slashdot story has already talked about a nice step-by-step for Linux on Dreamcast [linuxdevices.com].
Re:Life in it yet (Score:1)
Re:Life in it yet (Score:2, Interesting)
Ultimately, this platform is going to become useless if someone doesn't come up with a way to get ethernet on it cheaper than the $150 or so that BBAs have been going for. I love my DC, and I was seriously jazzed when they announced the BBA, but then of course the platform died off.
Mind you, it's a pretty bad game machine in most respects. While many gamers have learned to live with them, very few actually enjoy the controller, which is the second-worst gaming controller ever, IMO. The first is the original Sega Master System controller, which made an artform out of moving in cardinal directions. If you weren't an artist (and I mean this in the gamer sense) then you hadn't a hope in hell of moving properly. Oddly enough, the Sega Saturn's 3D Control Pad was superior to the DC controller in every way but expandability, especially in terms of ergonomics. Sega took a step backwards with the DC's controller, making it unwieldy and removing two buttons.
The DC will once again be an excellent hobbyist platform if a new source of ethernet access can be provided. With its 200MHz SH4 chip, 32MB of onboard memory, and 2Mbps controller bus, it's actually a fairly worthwhile system. The lack of local storage outside of the CD/GD-ROM is a severe problem if you do not have ethernet, but with it it's no problem at all. And the VGA support really adds to the usefulness of the whole thing.
Has anyone disassembled a BBA and put it up on the 'net? Can anyone comment on the feasibility of building one's own BBA? I assume there's really not very much to it, and that it's similar in complexity (and design?) to an ISA NIC, though of course the bus and form factor are entirely different. Is any custom logic on it something which could possibly be replicated with an FPGA?
Re:Life in it yet (Score:1)
I believe it is 16MB of onboard memory.
Re:Life in it yet (Score:2)
I agree with you that the BBA has to be cheaply replaced in order for this thing to live on, I totally disagree with you on the controller. I like it, and everyone I know likes it was well. In fact I've never really seen the controller being bashed anywhere, online, IRL, etc. Based on 2+ years of Dreamcast gaming and Dreamcast-related reading, I think I can say the DC controller-haters are in the minority.
And they're way better than the PS2 controllers. I have to contort my thumb at a right angle just to use the analog sticks... with the DC, my thumb can rest naturally on the d-pad or the analog stick.
Also, aside from your critique of the controller and the BBA problems, you then go on to say it's a pretty darn good system over all. And you didn't even mention the DC's reputed ease of programming, quite possibly its biggest strength from a hacker's standpoint.
So aside from the controller "problem" (most people don't consider it a problem, and you can buy replacements you know) that leaves the BBA as the only real flaw. So I don't get the "pretty bad game machine in most respects". Don't be dissing my beloved Dreamcast.
Dreamcast on Java (Score:2)
No need for rummage sales (Score:4, Interesting)
It comes with a modem and a browser and you can get a keyboard and mouse for it. Several companies make adapters that allow you to connect it to a monitor. You can still find the broadband (Ethernet) adapter on Ebay for about $120.
I have the base linux system up and running on it, so now I'm working on getting it to dial up an ISP and start a browser on power-up. My grandma has been putting off getting online for a long time, and now I can get her there for $50 + ISP charges. All she has to do is push the power button and she's on the web and able to email her far flung family. I'm making sure the interface is big and readable on her 35" TV.
It's pretty easy for me to get linux running on it now, and then connect to my home computer and run terminal services. Why do I do this? Because $150 for a new computer for my wife is much less than $1000 for a new low-end computer, especially when it is just used for basic productivity suite software and web browsing.
Also, the linux system is just a CD-R, so I just pop it out, and pop in a game and I'm playing Quake, or Crazy Taxi, or Ready to Rumble, or Sega NFL with no patches or incompatabilities with up to three of my friends. (All of these games are readily available used for $15 or new for $45)
Re:No need for rummage sales (Score:1)
Where do you buy your low-end PCs? The airport gift shop? You can buy a pretty darn powerful computer for $600-750 even at retailers like Best Buy.
Re:No need for rummage sales (Score:1)
$600-$750 is a lot more than $150.
Re:No need for rummage sales (Score:2, Interesting)
Consider the percentage of homes around the world which are equipped with television. Even people in third-world countries often have TVs and a satellite feed.
Maybe we should set up some sort of UUCP-like (but receive-only) system (I'd like to use UUCP with a new transfer method, since the software exists already) which will run on abandoned platforms like the dreamcast which can be used in third world countries to recieve news, survival information (like how to build structures which will last, perhaps? out of low-grade materials of course) and so on? You could include on the disc some sort of small encyclopedia and the CIA world fact book :)
I ordered the upgrade.. (Score:2)
Can also bootup in a minute and read news, check cnn.com, view weather.com and news.com in less time it takes for a laptop to resume from power saving.
The DC is far from dead as long as these games are still playable. for 80 bucks you can't go wrong. From what i've heard expect the DC to be 59.00 by christmas. Worth that price alone for colectors.
Java on a dreamcast - no thanks. (Score:1)
Perhaps a better question is "why bother with Java on a console?"
Java has turned out to be the biz for server-side web development, and enterprise computing in general.
Where Java has not had such a great success is in browsers. Historically, there have been problems with incompatibilities between Java implementations on even the big-name browsers (Netscape, IE). This was particularly a problem with the Java front-end APIs. With all this, and M$ studiously ignoring Java, I don't think it will become any more popular on the browser than it already is.
Java could yet evolve into the platform of choice for desktop applications, but for now it has missed. Who would want to run BEA's Weblogic on a dreamcast?
Re:Java on a dreamcast - no thanks. (Score:2)
The thing might be that "we nerds" who know java, might think that it sucks and its dead but ordinary people that wants a quick fun doesnt give a shit if its down with shockwave/flash or java or what ever plugin .. They just want to play or do what ever the applet does for them ...
pondering the DC as a thin client... (Score:1)
However, I will say that I view it as a 'Good Thing'{tm} that we're seeing a powerful console unit with a pretty good collection of games coming on the market at a bargain-basement price, which lets people play around with both an embeded system and a fairly powerfull architecture in a hobbyist environment. I do not however believe that anyone will be able to provide a killer-app (besides Soul caliber
I do hold out faith that the PS2 will fill this role however. Sony has already produced a Linux Dev-Kit (admittedly for the JPN market only) and with a much broader market penetration and a simple 10/100bT & hard-drive solution on the horizon for the US market, I'm very hopefull that by this time next year, I'll have a little black PS2 boxen in my TV center that gives me access to my other boxen, broadband connection, and an assortment of OSS solutions for myself and my less geek-ish friends to use. Does anyone else feel that this may well be what we discover over the next 12-months?
hmmn...
food for thought
The *REAL* Best Use for a DC... (Score:1)
Before I snagged my DC, I would've had to wait until morning to check GameFAQs. Now, I just switch inputs to the DC (or save the DC game in progress), boot up, search, and then power off and back to the game.
I'd love the ability to VNC from my living room to work on my website. And it's a lot easier to check those *special* sites in a different room...
GTRacer
- "It's for a Soc class, I swear!"
Emulation... (Score:1)
So I'm assuming you'd be able to play Gameboy advance games on Dreamcast now. Cool.
Now if someone would only make a dreamcast emulator in java...
Why not? (Score:1)
Why not have an internet connection for a console if you can? The DC has always been cheap, and it is a good console too. The internet connection just makes it better.
I am a little sad that Sega didn't produce more broadband adapters. I think there is, still today, a market for them. I for sure would by one if I could, but I don't want to pay USD 200 for it (I have a european DC, so it has to be modified if I want to put in a japaneese or american broadband adapter).
The main thing to remember is that the internet connection was put there so people could play multiplayer games, not just so they could browse the net. The web browser should be seen as an added bonus!
I saw some posts regarding linux on the DC. Check out DC-Emulation [dcemulation.com]. You'll be amazed at the amount of emulators, OS'es and other stuff that is available for the DC.
If you want a console you can write programs for without spending USD 2000 on some devkit, get a DC.
X server? (Score:2, Interesting)
Heh... misread the headline... (Score:2)
:)
--Tom Geller, Executive Director
SpamCon Foundation [spamcon.org]
Someone actually supports a product? (Score:2)
If only every software maker did this...
Dreamcast we worship you. (Score:3, Interesting)
Broadband adapters need to be made again!
For god sakes SEGA is still making games for the DC, as they only pulled out of the hardware business. It's flat out impossible to play new games online (WSB2K2, Mars Matrix, etc) when you canceled your dial-up account 2 years ago.
As for another suggestion posted above; yes streaming mp3 support needs to be covered. The DC outputs some of the best sound I've heard on a console. *If* I could get a BBA then I would be able to stream them right of the PC. But, I've also archived all my mp3's to CD so I can already play them in the DVD player, DC and PC. BUT! Playing a shout,er,icecast stream would be great for ambient music.
The DC can be anything people want it to be. It's your all in one box. It's even got a C64 emulator.
But what can we do to resurrect this machine to above it's full glory?
[ps. i noticed on mtv the other day that they gave a few DC's away on a show - so people, of course, still love them.]
Broadband for DC without BBA (Score:3, Informative)
here's a link to a project where you use the DC internal modem to network to a linux PC through another modem and piggybacking on that broadband.
Google is your friend.
http://www.kinox.org/articles/linuxdc.html
Re:Broadband for DC without BBA (Score:2)
This still doesn't help you if, in addition to ditching dial-up with 1996, you also haven't had a modem around since 1997....
VGA Adapter (Score:1)
online? I've tried several online videogame
stores, but nobody carries them anymore.
Shawn
No more Broadband Adaptors (Score:2, Interesting)
At this point I can only find this device on Ebay for inflated prices.
I believe that when the Broadband Adaptor becomes impossible to get, the Dreamcast's viability for any NOS will die. What a shame.
rhadc
Long Live The DC!!! (Score:2)
Bah, Dreamcasts are STILL in stores. (Score:2)
Good DC games to try (Score:1)
-Soul Calibur
-Dead Or Alive 2
-Powerstone
-Powerstone 2
-V Rally 2
-Ferrari 355 Challenge
-Crazy Taxi 2
-Soldier of Fortune
-Unreal Tournament
-Quake III
There's also CD images on the net containing hundreds of NES / SNES images along with well working emulators...
Java nice, but gimme BBA first (Score:2)
Yes, there are some hacks, like the modem-to-modem hack to connect your DC through your computer, but that doesn't work if you don't have a modem in the same room as your TV (my computer is at least 100-150 feet from my TV and DC).
But a decent hack to ethernet enable my DC would make me a happy man. Supposedly bITmASTER's site had an ISA bridge for the expansion port, which you could connect an ethernet card to (though it wouldn't be compatible with games, you could at least use it with NetBSD/Linux for DC). If it was actually compatible with the BBA it would be even better. But bITmASTER's site is now missing in action and I can't find schematics or any info anywhere.
I'd spend 100 bucks on parts because this would be a great hack. Too bad I'm not enough of a hardware hacker/EE guru to do this - I'm just a CS grad who can use a soldering iron and maybe a logic probe. But if anyone out there has any bright ideas, I'm more than glad to help in any way possible.
Re:Just one question... (Score:1)
This rocks. Dreamcast with the web browser means that if you want to, you can surf the internet, even check your email, from anywhere with a TV and a phone jack. Pretty convenient, if you ask me. Add Java to that, and you not only can play some of the interesting Java-based games on the internet, but with VNC, you can use your home desktop for pretty much anything. This just makes a cool platform even better.