Saturday, December 28, 2019
The Gotek Floppy Drive Emulator in the IBM PC World
The Gotek floppy drive emulator is a simple, cheap and little device that, as its name says, emulates a floppy drive. There are many varieties of these devices and they usually come with a USB port on the front of the unit and a 34-pin header + 4-pin power header on the back. While originally intended to replace disk drives in industrial, sewing and musical equipment, they can be used with standard PC floppy controllers. However, as they come they are at best diamonds in the rough, so in this blog entry I will describe how to make these devices more useful for vintage IBM PCs and compatibles.
Tuesday, December 24, 2019
A Brief History of Godzilla on Home Media
Before home video tape and disc formats was available, the only way to see a motion picture was in the theater during its first run or through a reissue. Later, when television became available films would be available for broadcast but TVs were expensive in the 1950s, color TV was expensive until the mid 1960s, and studios typically did not make their prestigious library titles available at first (with occasional exceptions) because they still viewed themselves in competition with television.
Godzilla movies have been released on home video for a very long time, longer than many people may realize. With the release of the Criterion Showa set on Blu-ray, we will finally have had a release of every Godzilla film on HD disc. Here in this blog article I will give a brief overview of the franchise's release history on all home video formats, both popular and obscure. I am concentrating on what was available in the English-language market, with which is what I am the most familiar.
Godzilla movies have been released on home video for a very long time, longer than many people may realize. With the release of the Criterion Showa set on Blu-ray, we will finally have had a release of every Godzilla film on HD disc. Here in this blog article I will give a brief overview of the franchise's release history on all home video formats, both popular and obscure. I am concentrating on what was available in the English-language market, with which is what I am the most familiar.
Tuesday, October 29, 2019
Game Boy Interface Revisited
A few years ago, I discussed a piece of homebrew software called Game Boy Interface (GBI). GBI was written and is maintained by a GameCube enthusiast who goes by the handle Extrems. Extrems intended to replace the official Game Boy Player (GBP) Start-Up disc for the GameCube which, when combined with the attachment that is fitted underneath your GameCube, allows you to play Game Boy, Game Boy Color and Game Boy Advance cartridges using genuine GBA hardware. Before GBI, if you did not have the official disc, your GBP attachment was useless. GBI quickly made the official disc essentially obsolete, but the software has been radically revised since I first profiled it. Let's return and see what's changed and I will give my own personal take on how I like to use the software. This will not be a fully comprehensive guide because there are features geared toward hardware I do not own and uses I do not put GBI, but if you are new to GBI you may find something here instructive.
Monday, October 28, 2019
Nintendo's 8-bit Obsession with Golf
Friday, September 20, 2019
The Intellivision Amico - Can a "Family Friendly" Console Succeed?
![]() |
| The Intellivision Amico in Metallic Pearl, courtesy of Intellivision Entertainment |
Saturday, August 10, 2019
Planet X3 - Review of a New Real Time Strategy Game for the IBM PC
![]() |
| Title Screen VGA |
Sunday, July 21, 2019
Of Bytes and Borders
There is more to the screen than those pixels or tiles which a graphics programmer had the ability to manipulate into graphical images. In many vintage consoles and home computers, their display hardware could sometimes display color outside the active display area. In this blog post we will review some of these devices, try to identify the size of the borders and any special purposes to which they may have been put.
Tuesday, May 21, 2019
Screen Persistence and the GBA - LCD Abuse
The Game Boy Advance has a TFT LCD screen, and in its last variants, the screen was backlit. TFT screens offer faster pixel response times over earlier passive matrix technology. The GBA TFT LCD screen was improved over the earlier screens used for the Game Boy Color, but developers took advantage of the response time of these screens on occasion to make for interesting effects. Let's take a look.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)


