>Is it more expensive to have a pc in your cab then to have a >dedicated game running and if anyone can give me any information >about dedicated games I would greatly appreciate.
I think this thread got somewhat off track, but here goes. For a single game, it is cheaper to just use a dedicated board and one game. The PC and MAME route gives you access to 4000 MAME games. If you want to be able to play more than 20-25 games, then the PC option becomes cheaper. And if you want more than maybe 10 simultaneously, it's the only way to go anyway.
>Also, one last question,
There were two questions. (making money off MAME and hiding the desktop).
> for those with pc's in your cab. If you were to put your cabs in a >pizza place or somewhere to make money
Dangerous ground here. First off, you probably don't have rights to the ROMS used to play the games. Even if you did, commercial use of MAME violates the MAME license.
In response to Cisco Kid: There is a distinct difference. If I am playing MAME without rights to the ROMS I am using, theoretically, the ROM copyright holders could confiscate my PC and maybe sue me for $100's of millions of dollars (lots of luck collecting). If I am running a pizza parlor and have a MAME machine set up making money, the ROM copyright holders could get an injunction against the MAME developers and a court order to force them to cease and desist work on the project, or at least make distribution of it in the U.S.A illegal. Personally, I think too much of MAME and the work that the dev's have done to take the risk.
OT hypothetical question(s) for the MAME regulars - If I set the machine up to accept quarters, it is a violation of the MAME license. Now:
1) If I set the machine on free play, is it a violation of the MAME license, b/c theoretically I will sell more pizza b/c of people coming in to play the machine, thus I am making additional profit off of MAME.
2) If I set the machine to accept tokens and give away 10 tokens with any purchase, is this a violation. (basically same conditions as above).
3) If I set the machine to accept tokens and sell a slice of pizza for $3.00 or a slice of pizza and 5 tokens for $4.00 . . . (techically the machine isn't making money, but . . . )
>, would you be able to make it so the player cannot exit out of the >current game. (i.e you have mario bros playing and you dont want >them to be able to exit that game to basically the desktop.)
Yes, depends if you want a single game or all MAME games. For a single game, just lock the keyboard in the cab and don't put an escape key on the cabinet. Then you need a shortcut to MAME in you Startup folder.
For all MAME games, you can do this with EmuLoader (and probably other front-ends). See
www.mameworld.net/emuloader/ and the Party Mode section in the tips n trick documentation file. You then need a shortcut to EmuLoader in your startup folder.
You might want to run a custom compile so you don't see "Game XXX has known problems - the emulation is not 100% accurate" or worse "IF YOU ARE NOT LEGALLY ENTITLED TO PLAY GAME XXX PRESS ESC NOW, OTHERWISE PRESS OK TO CONTINUE"
Information on avoiding these is available here:
http://www.fraggersxtreme.com/arcadepanels/faq.htm#How do I get rid of the blasted "Click Ok to continue?" screens>Because If I go with the pc in the cab I dont think I want users to >actually know theres a pc in there, so I dont ever want them to see >the desktop.
The problem is if the machine re-boots (or some kid unplugs it b/c he wants to have the high score (bad on a Windows PC)), you will probably briefly see.
TNT2 - 16M, and then
AWARD BIOS 7.60
AMD XP 2600
256,235 Kb RAM
before the ROM initialization screen starts, which is a pretty clear indication that you're not running a dedicated arcade game.
>Just wondering how this worked....
Now you know (well, 1/2 of it anyway)
>(sorry for rambling)
I rambled more than you, but everyone's used to that with me now. NP.