August 27, 2025, 02:04:29 pm
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By "retro" I mean, keyboard hacks, 17" PC monitors, marble shelf paper, Pentium II's, MAME .37b, etc.You never know what will be considered cool 15 or 20 years from now. Maybe emulating the BYOAC pioneers will be the "in" thing...
Only if you're poor ass broke and trying to do an entire project as close to $0 as possible. At that point, that person might want to reconsider his or her priorities.
Quote from: SavannahLion on November 07, 2007, 07:38:03 pmOnly if you're poor ass broke and trying to do an entire project as close to $0 as possible. At that point, that person might want to reconsider his or her priorities. That's not the point.Imagine Junior played his father's MAME machine back in 1998 when he was 7 or 8 years old. When he hits 30, what is he going to be nostalgic about? His father probably built the machine because he was nostalgic about original arcade machines from the 80's, but Junior never played original arcade machines, he played Dad's MAME machine, with marble shelf paper...
What if Dad's machine is a top notch, fully laminated, 27", ipac equipped unit?
Quote from: somunny on November 07, 2007, 08:14:34 pmWhat if Dad's machine is a top notch, fully laminated, 27", ipac equipped unit?Then that may be what he ends up wanting. It would be no different than it is now—some people are nostalgic for pinball machines, others for Pac-Man, still others for SFII, etc. It is all about what you did as a kid.
Quote from: MaximRecoil on November 07, 2007, 08:22:30 pmQuote from: somunny on November 07, 2007, 08:14:34 pmWhat if Dad's machine is a top notch, fully laminated, 27", ipac equipped unit?Then that may be what he ends up wanting. It would be no different than it is now—some people are nostalgic for pinball machines, others for Pac-Man, still others for SFII, etc. It is all about what you did as a kid.Well, I went ahead and built him one, too.
Quote from: MaximRecoil on November 07, 2007, 07:13:55 pmBy "retro" I mean, keyboard hacks, 17" PC monitors, marble shelf paper, Pentium II's, MAME .37b, etc.You never know what will be considered cool 15 or 20 years from now. Maybe emulating the BYOAC pioneers will be the "in" thing...Only if you're poor ass broke and trying to do an entire project as close to $0 as possible. At that point, that person might want to reconsider his or her priorities.
...500mhz processors, and especially monitors...
Quote from: SavannahLion on November 07, 2007, 07:38:03 pmQuote from: MaximRecoil on November 07, 2007, 07:13:55 pmBy "retro" I mean, keyboard hacks, 17" PC monitors, marble shelf paper, Pentium II's, MAME .37b, etc.You never know what will be considered cool 15 or 20 years from now. Maybe emulating the BYOAC pioneers will be the "in" thing...Only if you're poor ass broke and trying to do an entire project as close to $0 as possible. At that point, that person might want to reconsider his or her priorities. actually, if you were trying to recreate something from 1998 twenty years from now it could cost a bit because you will find it hard to find any working hardware from that era- ps2 keyboards, 500mhz processors, and especially monitors...
That's entirely true. However, what are the chances that a vast majority of kids today are actually going to accurately remember or recall the technical specifics of the MAME cabinet in question?
That's entirely true. However, what are the chances that a vast majority of kids today are actually going to accurately remember or recall the technical specifics of the MAME cabinet in question? And chances are really good that those same kids are going to want to include some updated game or hardware that can't be played on a PII.Therefor, I still stand by my original statement.
"Hey why aren't the two extra pixels staying when the cliff in Joust disappears? This isn't MAME cabinet accurate!"
Quote from: SavannahLion on November 08, 2007, 12:27:17 pmThat's entirely true. However, what are the chances that a vast majority of kids today are actually going to accurately remember or recall the technical specifics of the MAME cabinet in question? And chances are really good that those same kids are going to want to include some updated game or hardware that can't be played on a PII.Therefor, I still stand by my original statement. They don't need to remember the technical specifics, they just need to find someone who does. Research is the first step for most any nostalgic purchase/project. I find that a strong sense of nostalgia and perfectionism tend to go hand in hand, which drives people to get things exactly as they remember them, or as close as is possible.
I would not think any different of my offspring too, when they book me into a cheap retirement home.
Sure, you can do research on other cabinets and even pick up Saint's book. But in the end, the problem is the same, only the person(s) who constructed that particular MAME cabinet knows the specifics. If something about that cabinet is truly custom, ie custom GUI software, then no amount of research is going to locate it if the person who wrote it never documented it.