or maybe point us in the direction of the text....
His bottom left card, under the MAME logo, says (in all caps):
"
On December 24th, 1996, Nicola Salmoria began working on his single hardware emulators, which he then merged into one program during January 1997. He named the accomplishment by the name of Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator, or MAME for short.
The first official release was MAME 0.1, which was released on the evening of February 5th, 1997. Using a modular and portable driver oriented architecture with an open source philosophy, it soon grew into immense proportions. The current version supports 3792 ROM sets, 2171 unique games."
(Note: I can't read the actual number of ROM sets and unique games, but these would be the correct numbers today.)
His bottom right card says (again in all caps):
"
MAME stands for Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator. When used in conjunction with a game's data files (ROMs), MAME will more or less faithfully reproduce that game on a PC. MAME can currently emulate over 1900 unique (and over 3300 in total) classic arcade video games from the three decades of video games - '70s, '80s and '90s.
The ROM images that MAME utilizes are "dumped" from arcade games' original circuit-board ROM chips. MAME becomes the "hardware" for the games, taking the place of their original CPUs and support chips. Therefore, these games are NOT simulations, but the actual, original games that appeared in arcades.
MAME's purpose is to preserve these decades of video-game history. As gaming technology continues to rush forward, MAME prevents these important "vintage" games from being lost and forgotten."
I'm having a little more trouble reading the center card, so there will be some gaps here...
"
#1 Dedicated four-way directional joystick specifically included for classic games such as Pac-Man, Donkey Kong, etc.
#2 Eight way rotary joysticks which are compatible with all eight way directional games, as well as all rotary joysticks and spinner games such as Ikari Warriors, Discs of Tron, Time Soldiers, etc.
Classic two button arcade button group for older games such as Defender, (can't read) (can't read)
, (can't read)
, etc.
(Can't read)
seven button arcade button group designed to be compatible with all current arcade (can't read) (can't read)
Capcom, SNK and (can't read)
fighting games."
--Chris