Longtime4321 wrote: ↑Fri May 17, 2024 6:23 pmI'm gonna say it, I don't think this guy has any experience in electrical engineering
About as much as social engineering.
Longtime4321 wrote: ↑Fri May 17, 2024 6:23 pmI'm gonna say it, I don't think this guy has any experience in electrical engineering
About as much as social engineering.
Here are a couple more pictures.
Please pardon the rbg light reflection you see on the left hand side. I didn't notice them on the small screen of the phone.
Yeah I noticed that too.
I would still like to get a hold of at least a tube tv to at least try out the composite output for comparison.
My next door neighbor use to have a small tv so will hit her up to see if she still has it buried somewhere.
Here is a picture I just took in Oregon Trail....is the detail ok? Let me know and I can grab a couple more and zip them up.
I took with my S24 phone so hopefully it wasn't "AI" altered.
I'll play around with it and see what i can figure out. Thanks for pointing out Caprice Forever...it has a nice disk viewer that I can use.
Nice to know! I couldn't find any information other than they were 180k per side and 40 tracks.
I'm not too familiar with the Amstrad line of computers, but as far as I know, the 3" floppy drives they used only supported 40 tracks, which is what this core supports.
The disk image you linked too is 42 tracks.
If you try the "non-original" disk (2nd tab on that website), it's 40 tracks and it works.
Do you have Border turned off? If so, turn it on and see if that helps you.
The "stretched" images you see should actually be a blank screen, but when the signal is cropped to remove the border, it's causing that weird effect.
Not intentional. Minor fix...just needs a line swap. PR submitted for next update. In mean time a CTRL-ALT-ALT should do.
If you press F9 from the Main OSD screen, does it drop you to the linux terminal/shell with a login prompt?
Also, can you post your MiSTer.ini file?
bbond007 wrote: ↑Fri Mar 29, 2024 11:48 pmAlternately, you can add:
Code: Select all
[C64] TCP_FLOW = 0
to the MidiLink.INI located in /media/fat/linux
Great! I wasn't sure since I didn't happen to notice any other setting being overwritten that way.