Naomi Peori

@oopo
113 Followers
94 Following
15 Posts
Embedded developer. Infosec tourist. Console hacking and CTFs for fun. Compilers and toolchains are my playground.
Homepagehttp://peori.ca/naomi
Twitterhttp://twitter.com/ooPo
Githubhttp://github.com/ooPo
Hard to believe this store is still up, but here we are in 2023 with full-priced Vita games.

I want a Mastodon client that can let me have multiple accounts across instances but present my feed as one large aggregated persona and automatically submit posts from whichever aspect of myself best fits the content of a toot.

I don't want to exist in a singular form anymore. It feels all-or-nothing and makes me overthink posting so much that I end up not participating at all.

I can't say no to new gaming hardware from Sony. Other than the price, only two back paddles and the reduced battery life... it's very nice and has a good feel.

Joystick modules were a good choice in this age of premature stick drift, but making better joysticks would be ideal.

Stick maintenance. It was feeling a bit loose.
They have more tension than the standard sticks, and unfortunately my usual upgrade of aluminum sticks didn't work as they're too thick to fit inside.
Tonight’s project was adding hall-effect sticks to a Steam Deck. Mainly as an excuse to open it up for the first time. It was surprisingly easy to work with compared to console controllers.
Current gen. It’s nice to be able to keep using the series 2 elite.
Last gen’s daily tools. A lot of hours were put into some great games with these two.

A lot of coders have that hobby project, the one that gets rewritten over time as their skill grows but never quite gets released. This is one of mine:

https://github.com/ooPo/MOS6502

It was example code during a recent round of job interviews but I'm kinda happy with it finally.

GitHub - ooPo/MOS6502: A small and simple library for emulating a MOS6502 cpu.

A small and simple library for emulating a MOS6502 cpu. - GitHub - ooPo/MOS6502: A small and simple library for emulating a MOS6502 cpu.

GitHub
Atari Lynx screen upgrade, a BennVenn IPS R6 kit. It required a small amount of (optional) soldering but was relatively simple to install. Recommended!