Tripitaka wrote:
Ha BL~~DY Ha, I think you miss the point. Yaroze was expensive for a couple of cables and a fuzzy black texture PS, required a PC and lacked many of the features the full Playstation developers' suite provided.
Expensive?. $650 when the Playstation was $200 doesn't seem like that much of a stretch. But, of course it was stripped down. Who would pay for a full dev unit if the "homebrew" version was thousands cheaper and offered the same features. The developers I worked with in the past all used modified PS to test games. It was too risky to burn up a dev unit.
Linux on PS2 may well be welcome but the HDD included with the Linux Kit is not compatible with PlayStation 2 games, (reformatting the HDD with the utility disc provided with the retail HDD enables use with PlayStation 2 games but removes the Linux). It didn't use the DVD ROM drive either did it, hmm....I'll give it a 4.
You can use the DVD-ROM, don't know where you heard that. As for the HD, you are probably correct. But, unless you want to play FFX (or the other 2-3 HD games) that isn't a big deal. (I've never been asked to reformat mine)
However, an A1200 just required a copy of Blitz Basic to get most people going and you don't need to reformat a HDD to play games. Even the CD32 was more flexible than Linux PS2 for homebrew.
Are you BL~~DY mad? The PS2 + Linux kit has more memory, a HD, Ethernet, DVD-ROM, VGA output, USB, etc. all which the CD32 is lacking. The CD32 doesn't even come with a floppy drive or keyboard. To develop ON the CD32 you need an expensive add-on, or you need to use a seperate computer (hmm... one of the negatives you said about PS homebrew)
I agree about the A1200, but that's because it's a computer. (But, remember this entire thread is based on the delusion that the GCN can become a computer).
And, again say that you need to format the HDD to play games. This is not true. It is only true if you want to use the HDD with a HDD compatible game.
I would like to see a true homebrew system like the Amiga was.
Agreed. Like I said the PS3 looks promising if it comes with Linux like has been mentioned. Otherwise, people can always grab a PC (they probably already have) and start coding.