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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 11th, 2023

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  • There are only a few reasons I can surmise that this would be the case:

    CRTs don’t add any input lag

    There’s no extra latency from being connected to the internet

    There’s no latency from bluetooth/wireless on the controller

    Because most older games are extremely badly optimised by today’s standards. The original Metroid slows to an absolute crawl when there’s more than about 4 sprites on the screen; the dragon boss in Mega Man (2, I think) was such a laggy, slippery mess that I gave up trying to beat the game; Ocarina of Time runs at 20FPS (worse if you’re in a PAL territory like I am), and that’s one of the better playing N64 games.

    I think you’re either noticing one of these extra sources of delay, or you’re blinded by nostalgia.




  • DigDoug@lemmy.worldtoAndroid@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    3 months ago

    Custom ROMs were always a pretty niche thing, and they’ve become much less worth it since:

    Stock Android doesn’t suck as much as it used to

    Banking Apps aren’t guaranteed to work

    VoLTE doesn’t work (this might depend on phone model)

    Most manufacturers now offer software support for a reasonable length of time

    So unless there’s an old feature you want to keep (LG Quad DAC diehards represent), or you’re super privacy-conscious, most people aren’t going to bother.


  • DigDoug@lemmy.worldtoGames@lemmy.worldWhy do people like Mario Kart?
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    3 months ago

    I remember when I first bought my Gamecube… I had to sign an agreement that I would never play a non-Nintendo property again. “How could they ever enforce this?” I thought. Little did I know that the next day, the Sony SWAT Team would be bursting into my house to extract my Playstation. It was absolutely terrifying.

    I haven’t played a single non-Nintendo game since.



  • It’s still in active development, but you might want to keep an eye on Plasma Bigscreen. I’ve been looking for a similar setup to you, and it seems to tick all of the boxes, at least for me.

    I only learned about it recently, and I’ve been too busy to try it in that time, but I’ll edit this post with my impressions once I get the time to have a play with it.



  • Well this thread is an absolute shitshow.

    Jellyfin is great, but if you refuse to let yourself understand that Plex’s ease of setup for remote access is a point in its favour - especially when sharing with non-tech savvy people - then you’re just as bad as the supposed “Plex shills”.

    Plex is well on the enshittification train, and I’ve always been a bit concerned about how private it may or may not be, but there’s absolutely no way I’d have been able to share a Jellyfin instance with my grandfather, especially as his dementia got worse.


  • I don’t know whether it’s me or my hardware, but display managers seem to absolutely hate me. I’ve tried quite a few, and I’ve always encountered some sort of issue within a few days. Even on distros that install and set them up automatically for me.

    Since I’m the only user of my computers, I’ve set mine up to log me in and startx (well, now the Wayland equivalent) automatically, bypassing the DM altogether. If I decide to experiment with other window managers/desktop environments, I just change the line in my bashrc.