endrift 🏳️‍⚧️

@endrift@treehouse.systems
941 Followers
49 Following
2.4K Posts
Professional Cyberentomologist, Hobbyist Emulator Developer. Purveyor of cursed technological information.
Pronounsshe/they
Primary dev onmGBA
Websitehttps://endrift.com
GitHubhttps://github.com/endrift
After letting the batteries "settle" after the Nomad was off for a while, the reading rose to 7.65V haha. My multimeter doesn't do testing under load, so I'm sure that would fall off immediately if I turned it back on.
I would assume, based on how other consoles from this era work, that the input voltage is fed through a regulator that outputs 5V. The input range is anything from like 8V all the way up to 11V or more. The power brick I have for this is 10V, but 9V works fine with it, so I assume the battery pack feeds through the same regulator. I wonder if it's possible to mod it with modern parts so it can take more like 7-8V and work fine with 2× 3.7V cells in series.
Update: the minimum voltage the Nomad remains functional at is roughly 7.4V. This seems conveniently like 2× 3.7V Li-Ion cells, but unfortunately that's the nominal voltage. As soon as they start discharging, the Nomad would probably die. The nominal voltage of the battery pack is 9V, and 7.4V is what my multimeter read when the Nomad shut off from low battery.

Does anyone here have a PDP Riffmaster controller for Xbox and is able to check something for me when plugging it into a Linux computer? You'll need to compile some code for the program to check it, and afaik the code only works on Linux right now.

Boost for visibility please.

The dial is labeled "bright" but it definitely does not adjust the light. It adjusts the angle (along the pitch axis) of the viewing cone. I don't really know how it works.
This might be a joke playing on the ghosting on the Nintendo Switch 2, but like...the Nomad's screen is possibly the worst color LCD on any device I've ever used. I have no idea how I played games on this when I was a kid. It straight up has a dial for adjusting the alignment of the viewing angle. It's baffling and I've never seen that on any other device.
Damn...people weren't kidding about that ghosting.
Can't believe they renamed Coq to Rocq
Pokémon Stadium is old enough to rent a car
Want to upset a millennial? Tell them that Super Smash Bros Melee is old enough to drink
×
No, we don't. We need to talk about your trackers.

@finestructure I'm not talking to stalkers.

It's a bit like burglars complaining about your door lock....

@finestructure I share the sentiment, but I'd make the diff between "ad blocker" and "tracker blocker" though.

i.e. in practice I could be understanding of "either subscribe to support us or browse for free but with ads, bc _we can't work for free_".

But I would never tolerate "either subscribe or _enable cookies to allow us to track you_".

They can still serve you (non personalized) ads to get revenue for their work without needing to track you for it

@aligatr I run a website that has no tracking, still serves ads, and isn’t affected by ad blockers. The onus isn’t on me to deal with the distinction 🤷‍♂️

@aligatr I didn’t mean this to sound contentious. I get your point and I think it’s important to support sites!

The thing is that these banners are always about the tracking cookies.

@finestructure @aligatr the challenge is for the advertisers to understand their return on investment. But if they think about sales £ vs spend £ rather than views and clicks they wouldn't need all these trackers?

@aligatr @finestructure
In all other cases, the advertisers pay the owner of the equipment for permission to put their ad up. Only when the equipment is a computer, they expect to be able to do so for free.

If I want my name on a train, I can pay the rail road company. If I get a can of spray paint and go down to the station at night, it's not an ad, it's called grafitti.

Why should computers be different?

That's why I say I'm not blocking ads, I'm blocking grafitti. Want to show an ad on my monitor? Negotiate an advertising contract.

@finestructure

All they will get out of this is, permanent incognito tabs.

@M0KHR in a world of informed consent that would be the case. in our world though, that kind of bad faith coersion works really effectively.

fortunately tho it's up to each individual. whew.

@finestructure

Since I use an iPhone and just enabled whatever privacy setting Apple came out with a few years back now, lots of websites think I have an adblocker. I do not. They are absolutely telling on themselves.

@kemotep @finestructure You really should get an ad blocker though :3

@soop @finestructure

I absolutely cannot go without Firefox and uBlock Origin on the desktop. ;)

@kemotep @soop @finestructure For iOS, the best option is definitely Wipr 2: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/wipr-2/id1662217862
Small one-time fee but 100% worth it!
‎Wipr 2

‎Wipr blocks ads, popups, trackers, cookie warnings, and other nasty things that make the web slow and ugly. Websites in Safari will look clean, load fast, and stop invisibly tracking you. You’ll notice significant improvements to your battery life and data usage. Setup is a snap. Wipr’s blocklist…

App Store

@finestructure The sites that use these banners tend to have the most obtrusive ads that make the site unusable anyway, so I make a point avoid them.

It's not even just the trackers. Ad networks are a security risk. I'm the IT guy for an SMB and when I started this job, I would get calls from people panicked that they had a virus. It was always some scareware popup injected through the ads on the site they were visiting. After I forced uBlock Origin on all of the PCs, those calls stopped.

@finestructure
I think it's fair to say "if you don't want ads then subscribe". The question then becomes do they disable trackers for subscribed users
@Dubikan @finestructure
...and of course they don't.
But Ad Free! 👍
@finestructure No mercy for any site that tries to shame you for using an ad blocker. Instant pass on a site that does this.
@finestructure i don't use any ad blockers, just tracking blockers, so it feels like a tell every time i see one of these popups.
@finestructure exactly, nothing feels better than this
It’s beautiful isn’t it? (The Adblocker)
@finestructure

@finestructure If they want to talk about ad blockers, they should start with why they were necessary.

First, popups that were hard to close, then a big block saying to allow popups, then hijacking ads, then drive by malware.

@finestructure I have no problem with ads. I have a problem with the tracking that's almost always connected to them. I have a problem with the scams, predatory products, missinformation, and outright malware proliferated by ads. I have a problem with pages that are more ad than content. I have a problem with autoplaying videos and audio. I have a problem with content being blended with ads in a way you are never sure which is which. I have a problem with ads that are violating the very same platform guidelines, the creators on the same platform get demoneytised for violating the same rules. Have a problem with ads wasting humongous volumes of bandwidth and power I paid for. As long as that keeps being true, I'm running an ad blocker.
@finestructure dunno which one you're using but ublock origin doesn't show anything at all. Seems like it's able to block their detection script.
@finestructure that’s an insta close for me.
@finestructure Moi j’aurais même pu dire « YOU need ».

@finestructure I don't value sites that do these kinds of door slams..

I can get the same info 10 other places online. Don't need to say yes to turning off my ad blocker for anyone.

@finestructure fun fact: you can't subscribe to Slate's ad free offering with Firefox and an adblocker. Had to fire up chromium just to find out that they charge $120 per year. Oh, and of course you only find the price after the trial period in the small print, the prominently displayed price is $15.

Sigh. I like one of their podcasts but was very put off by being marketed to in this way.

@finestructure

Every site wants you to subscribe when all you want is *one* article, which was heavily promoted in various public media.

This is untenable for most people. Especially since you don't know in advance if the article is actually any good or just click bait.

What we need is a universal subscription service, where you can pay to get, say, 100 articles a month pulled from any of hundreds of different services.

@finestructure @GroupNebula563 I don’t block adverts, but I do block malware, trackers and spyware.
@EdwinG @finestructure the problem of course is that a lot of adverts tend to also fall into those categories quite often
@EdwinG may I recommend blocking ads too, you might love it!
@finestructure I usually just use my ad blocker to block their popup pestering about ad blockers.
@finestructure
Last time I used a VPN to access slate with an European address they said they share data with over 900 "partners".
@finestructure I want to know their acceptable ad policy.
@finestructure and your ads. I’m not interested in making you money, sorry slate/etc
@finestructure NEVER EVER WILL I DISABLE MY AD BLOCKER. No web site is worth the frustration and privacy invasion.
@sirwumpus @finestructure not a single website is worth disabling privacy. not any number of anything is worth disabling privacy.
@finestructure only 10? Doesn’t seem so awful. 🤣