Wii Homebrew Takes Several Leaps Forward 275
Croakyvoice writes "Fans of Homebrew on the Nintendo Wii can celebrate with an explosion of releases
today, in just a few hours there has been a release of a proof of concept version of Linux for the Wii, an MP3
Player, the Super
Nintendo emulator Snes9X has been ported and a converter that converts Gamecube Dol files into Elf for usage on the Wii (Which opens up a multitude of emulators and homebrew games and applications). A tutorial on how to get homebrew working with the Twilight
Hack will help those interested."
Wii Homebrew Takes Several Leaps Forward (Score:4, Funny)
Can you Wii while you're leaping? I mean, without getting wet?
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nintendo (Score:2, Funny)
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LJ
Given that Nintendo has already blocked Freeloader (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Given that Nintendo has already blocked Freeloa (Score:5, Interesting)
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The last think I need is to play DVDs on the Wii. None of my players play DivX so that is the functionality I want. If it could play them over the network even better!
Re:Given that Nintendo has already blocked Freeloa (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Given that Nintendo has already blocked Freeloa (Score:5, Funny)
I think you mean "milkshake".
I didn't say dollars.. (Score:4, Informative)
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Says the AC.
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Seven of whch equal around 13.50 of your US dollars...so yet again we are being ripped off royally over here on 'treasure island'.
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If shipping and handling of a physical product were involved, I would say no. However, we are talking about ROMs that are a fraction of the size of songs that you would find on iTunes that apparently make Apple and others money at being sold at $.99 a pop.
Obviously, bandwidth isn't the issue here.
Re:Given that Nintendo has already blocked Freeloa (Score:2)
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Screw Pricing, How about Availability (Score:2)
I could give a rat's ass about the price of the Virtual Console games. I bought a Wii so I could play the old games from my childhood, and I knew the price points when I bought in. What I didn't know was how pathetically slow the release of classic games would be. I really don't care abo
Re:Given that Nintendo has already blocked Freeloa (Score:5, Informative)
The way it's currently implemented, as soon as we start hacking the firmwares they put out, we've effectively won the battle for current consoles. Wiis contain a separate security ARM processor unofficially dubbed the "starlet". It is here that all of the interesting security takes place, and it is also responsible for most of the wii-specific hardware that the gamecube lacked. Ultimately, the consoles carry an unmodifiable boot ROM which loads an also unmodifiable boot1 bootstrap loader (unmodifiable because, although it sits in flash, it is checked against a hash stored in OTP memory). Boot1 is buggy. Boot1 loads Boot2, and we'll probably start hacking boot2 and the next step (the actual operating system and drivers that run on the starlet). This is going to be similar to the PSP scene, most likely: Nintendo will put out updates, but we'll work around them. We can also modify the existing firmware to prevent updates from happening.
However, new consoles can come with an updated boot1 (the OPT hash is programmed at the factory). Those might be impossible to hack the same way. However, the OS is buggy and other hacks can be found.
Their next system update may block this, but people just have to hold off until hacked firmwares come out. Worst case, you can always apply the hack to current consoles by directly modifying the Flash memory in the Wii.
All this only applies to the security system though, and the bug that was used for the demo at 24c3. It is rather unlikely that Nintendo will patch the Zelda bug (which is what we're using to boot current homebrew, not the meaner more powerful 24c3 bug) from firmware somehow, so there is a very good chance that we'll always have options for booting homebrew. Besides, we can find exploits in other games, easily. The 24c3 bug lets us get total system access, but even if they lock that out in newer consoles, we can still get homebrew running via game exploits.
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Great, now the Twilight Princess Team will... (Score:3, Funny)
Slowly but surely... (Score:5, Interesting)
It's not a perfect solution, but it does work, and it works well enough to play some pretty cool stuff. And you can even get paid to perform your hobby! How cool is that?
Disclaimer: I am associated with WiiCade. So take this with a grain of salt.
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I thought the Games/Gameplay was alright but the videos seem a little slow (compared to youtube under Verizon Fios). Can the site handle the load if it becomes popular?
I added your website to our Wii Favorites.
I'm still waiting for Java support in Wii Opera. My younger son wants to play Runescape and I'd like it so I can view/animate the local NOAA weather radar.
Keep up the good work.
Enjoy.
At last, a use for my copy of Twilight Princess (Score:2)
Unfortunately (Score:4, Funny)
wii-linux.com message (Score:2, Interesting)
SDGecko (Score:2, Informative)
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Given that you can get an SDGecko or knock-off for under USD$7 including postage from a few reasonably reliable Hong Kong suppliers, it's not that much of an impediment. Also, because of the nature of the attack, it's unlikely that that hack will get direct to the Wii's SD slot - it's more likely that a loader program in the SDGec
Yes, but... (Score:3, Funny)
No?
Awesome.
That's great and all (Score:2)
It does? Sweet.
Smash Bros (Score:2, Insightful)
PS3 Linux Wide Open (Score:5, Informative)
The Wii is just getting started as "homebrew". Its HW isn't nearly as screaming as the PS3, nor as designed to be open for Linux. Hacking it sounds like a fun toy, which is why people buy the Wii. But the PS3 is already starting to be a Linux platform more interesting than even its gaming. A few more leaps forward on the PS3 and the Wii will look so 21st Century.
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But Ubuntu is a better Linux for desktops, and it's more popular than YDL. Plus, I like the idea of a Linux that's not so closely connected to Sony, and still works well.
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Re:PS3 Linux Wide Open (Score:5, Informative)
You can, but don't expect Linux to do it. If your Myth box can do DLNA and export compatible h.264 videos, it'll stream over the network just fine.
The problem is, everyone thinks PS3-Linux runs "on bare metal" when it's really running on a virtual machine. The VM allows access to 6 of the 7 available SPEs (PS3's OS reserves one for its purpose, and one of the SPEs is disabled in the silicon). The VM disallows access to the RSX chip - it's a rather expensive framebuffer operation to update the screen (update memory, trigger interrupt to get VM to update RSX's framebuffer). Hard drive, card slots are virtualized, as well. Access to Bluetooth and WiFi are disabled. Access to the Blu-Ray drive is limited to insecure ATA commands only. Hard drive (SATA), Blu-Ray drive (IDE) and card slots are exported as standard SCSI devices without using any IDE-SCSI type emulation. A bad sector on the disk leads to strange errors (I know - my first drive upgrade had a bad sector, and the disk kept giving me strange ext3 errors).
Stupid framebuffer kernel thread also runs all the time...
I can't get the PS3 to play back a DVD upscaling to 1080p without Xine complaining that it has to drop frames. The X server is the Xfb framebuffer server. Xrandr, yes, Xv, no.
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Correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't Sony partner with Yellowdog to get Linux working on the PS3? Thats not a hack and like you said, you can't access the graphics chip (as of yet).
The Wii Zelda Hack allows us to control the machine in ways Nintendo doesn't approve of.
Don't get me wrong. I'd love to have a PS3. I just can't justify the expense with the wife right now.
Enjoy,
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I looked at the news sites for console hacking and didn't see much. Linux access to the RSX but nothing really far developed.
Is there an easy way to turn the PS3 into a replacement for my Xbox Media Center on my Xbox 1?
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The PSUbuntu site I linked to has howtos and other good advice. It's not exactly "concisely summarized", but it's got the info to make PS3 a Linux media center, often collected into one place. But it could use some help. Why don't you help out, maybe making a bunch of
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Not that wide, then.
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Pretty wide.
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3D party game development is not the same as homebrew hobbyist game development. I'm sure each game offered on Wii Ware will be done through an agreement with Nintendo requiring approval and some financial sharing. This isn't the same as somebody making a game on their own and offering it (typically) for free or donation.
Many homebrew games
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I didn't say that Linux on Wii isn't an impressive hack, or worth doing if you want to just hack something, which is perfectly admirable. Wii homebrew is certainly just getting started, if Linux doesn't even run on it already. It's been just getting started for a while now. Sony doesn't need to release an SDK, because Linux is the SDK (along with the IBM and other Cell SDKs that com
Why do they need some savegame hack? (Score:2)
Why hasn't there been any news on that?
I am amazed (Score:2)
ETA for WiiMAME and SCUMMVMii? (Score:2)
Now that would rock.
Perhaps it will beat Duke Nukem Forever.
Re:Get 'em Tiger! (Score:5, Interesting)
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Linux + mythfrontend + wiimote
Or you could you know, just use the wiimote in any linux distribution... just as a standard bluethoot device...
I *knew* someone would post something among those lines... hehe
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I *knew* someone would reply with something like that.
Go get em XBox one (Score:2)
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Assuming a decent radial menu system, maybe. Most uses of the Wiimote I've seen in games have treated it like a mouse, making you aim at buttons, which is about the last thing I want in a remote.
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Re:Get 'em Tiger! (Score:4, Insightful)
Sounds great to me. I don't have HD, nor do I plan to upgrade any time soon (I have no desire to have my livingroom dominated by a 40"+ monster, and given the viewing distances in my livingroom, HD would be a waste on anything smaller).
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Re:Get 'em Tiger! (Score:4, Insightful)
If you believe that, you don't understand the physics of human vision.
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no strawman arguements like "if i view a 51cm screen from 10m away it looks the same".
Re:Get 'em Tiger! (Score:4, Insightful)
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No, not end of story. Human vision doesn't work that way.
no strawman arguements like "if i view a 51cm screen from 10m away it looks the same".
If I view a 60cm screen from 3m away it looks the same, and that's a far more realistic scenario than the one you describe. HD is a waste for most of the population: anyone who isn't a home-theater nut.
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I can sure notice the difference between regular TV, the interlacing is horrible and deinterlacing can cause artifacts... 480p looks a lot better, but it still looks a little blocky even from 5 feet away.... 720p looks nice, and i cant tell the difference between 720p and 1080p at that distance. I refuse to try 1080i as i hate interlacing.
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Re:Get 'em Tiger! (Score:4, Informative)
I've seen the charts that show the supposed ability of the human eye to distinguish certain resolutions, and they all fail to take into account how the brain processes the signal over time as your eye moves (giving you a much higher resolution of vision).
Sure, if you watch a 17" screen from 10' away, its doubtful you can tell if its running at 640x480 or 1920x1280, but you wouldn't watch TV like that in the first place, would you?
Under most circumstances, I can't imagine (these days) configuring myself a MythTV like box without HD output capabilities.
PS, I use a PS3 with its DLNA UPnP features to watch my downloaded / ripped shows and movies in HD or upscaled on a 30" 1080i CRT.
On HDTV (Score:2, Funny)
*they know why theres a polar bear
*americas next top models actually comes round your house every week
*fox news is actually fair and balanced**
(in order of plausibility)
Does anybody really think the crap they watch on TV is improved by HD?
**The only time i want to see bill Oriely in HD is in his coffin (just to be sure the idiot is actually dead)
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I've got a 50" 720p and it looks better by a LOT. Even bluray stuff (1080p source downscaled) looks wonderful. Once you go blu....
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Re:Get 'em Tiger! (Score:5, Insightful)
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Simple:
a) My livingroom isn't just for watching TV, therefore I don't want it taking up a large amount of space.
b) The layout of my livingroom is such that the viewing distance from the couch to the TV is large, while the actual available space for the TV is small, thanks to things lik
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Re:Get 'em Tiger! (Score:5, Informative)
(My understanding is that one of the classic optimizations for the GameCube was to organize the data on the disc to provide the highest transfer rates during game loading.)
This design is why GameCubes had very few drive failures in comparison to the PS2. Nintendo builds systems like tanks.
Re:Get 'em Tiger! (Score:4, Informative)
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In fact I've got a socket A SDRAM based microatx board I've been eyeing on putting into an old NES shell. Granted, it won't fit perfectly, might have some junk in the trunk... Maybe a 2600 shell would be better, meh. The point being you can put that old hardware in anything you like.
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Re:Get 'em Tiger! (Score:4, Informative)
It has built-in wireless, comes with a remote control, is small and pretty, and now with a bit of luck hopefully it can run mplayer. That means DVD and stuff from your media server. I have a whole bunch of anime on my PC upstairs which I'd prefer to watch on the big screen from the sofa instead. Linux on Wii will make that possible.
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Re:Get 'em Tiger! (Score:5, Insightful)
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But if you do have old kit, such as I do, enough to build 3-4 computers. Then it makes much more sense to build a dedicated media center or linux box out of that.
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A P3's bus speed and clock speed would bottleneck the hell out of the video card and 1 gb of memory.
Well what exactly are you trying to do here, those bottlenecks are going to effect any media playback or general computer tasks. A Wii is going to be superior for gaming yes, that's a given. But I still hold forth that old hardware (I threw the p3 out there cuz thats what I'm playing with right now) is better for media center or computing tasks then mucking about with your Wii. Although I still like projects such as that.
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I don't mind paying for vintage games, as long as there is a compelling reason to do so. Make it look proper on the new system, save games fix any relevant bugs and make it w
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