You will not be able to post if you are still using Microsoft email addresses such as Hotmail etc
See here for more information viewtopic.php?f=20&t=7296
DO NOT USE MOBILE / CGNAT DEVICES WHERE THE IP CHANGES CONSTANTLY!
At this time, it is unfortunately not possible to whitelist users when your IP changes constantly.
You may inadvertently get banned because a previous attack may have used the IP you are now on.
So I suggest people only use fixed IP address devices until I can think of a solution for this problem!
terriblefire wrote: 30 Jul 2024 08:13
This design is meant for the casual gamer really. It's also an MSX2+ design. I can't remember if Omega was MSX2 yet?
Omega is MSX2, mine in particular has also the V9958.
No criticism on your attempt, just an explanation why there might be a lack of interest.
Cheshire Noir wrote: 02 Aug 2024 03:42
Poot! I wanted to get a TFMSX to help me diagnose my Omega MSX. (Mine is very, very unhappy)
Chesh
Help me pressure @go0se into building them :)
———
"It is not necessarily a supply voltage at no load, but the amount of current it can provide when touched that
indicates how much hurting you shall receive."
How many people on here from the UK owned an MSX in the 80's? Much like the Sharp X68K, I'd never heard of the MSX until the 2000s via the net.
It's funny that there is an Omega version of the MSX because thats the name I picked for my cheaper and easier to build Uzebox clone. In the case of the Uzebox Omega I picked that because my clone replaces the svideo of the Uzebox with a (O)mega Drive 2 compatible din AV socket.
As I’m from the Netherlands the MSX 1 was at the start of homecomputing all over the place here. If somebody told you in the late 80’s I have an old computer laying around it was almost certainly a MSX 1.
My uncly had an MSX 1 and every sunday we played buck rogers on it.
Later it was overtaken by c64 and Amigas and Atari ST’s.
We had MSX 2 at school. But MSX 2 was not a big success never saw them at my friends or family.
———
"It is not necessarily a supply voltage at no load, but the amount of current it can provide when touched that
indicates how much hurting you shall receive."