Nothing really new here, I’m just testing some internal things that will become public soon 🙂
Enjoy a new post in such a short time frame 😉
Nothing really new here, I’m just testing some internal things that will become public soon 🙂
Enjoy a new post in such a short time frame 😉
Hello everyone,
Apache have some issue on my server and tend to crash easily, I’m working on it, but it may get down sometime without me noticing it, I’m sorry about this and I’m trying to get this fixed asap.
Edit 25/03/2015: The issue should be now fixed.
A big thanks to mod_python..
I need to update the server, so please forgive any possible error that may come during the migration.
The old server will shutdown on 01/11/2013, and I already switch this blog on the new one, but problem may still exist.
Please don’t hesitate to tell of you found something weird!
A few month ago, I was speaking with friend about the marvelous Bandai’s WonderSwan, about making something that is missing for now on the platform: Flash Carts.
But before going more on the subject, I will give you some clues on the WonderSwan, and why it can be so attractive, even if it didn’t went out of Japan.
The WonderSwan is the last video game console made by Bandai, and it was at first a project of Yokoi Gunpei just before his tragic death. This handled game console was in direct line with the Gunpei’s leitmotiv: “Lateral thinking of obsolete technologies”
All his life he try to make the cheapest possible device, without lowering the quality, and this by using “old” technology and by finding a new way to use them. The Wii Remote, is an example, but the GameBoy too, or even the Nintendo DS, they use “obsolete” technology in them, but with modern goal.
There is too much to say on this and could make a full article, but the WonderSwan was made with this idea. When you look at the specs of the CPU of first model, a NEC V30MZ (a clone of the 8086), and when you think that the first WonderSwan was out in Japan in 1999 this look a bit old. But this come at a big price: the device cost was awfully low compared to competition, it was sold at ¥6800 (~$60 / ~50€) when the GameBoy Color cost at least the double or the triple. The other major advantage of the WonderSwan was it’s autonomy: ~30-40Hr … with only ONE AA battery!
The first model was only black and white, like the original GameBoy, and two other version come later, the WonderSwan Color (2000) and the WonderSwan Cristal (2002) with for both a color screen (241 color out of 4096) more RAM (512KB) and for the later a better screen: a TFT LCD instead of a FSTN one used on previous models.
All of thoses models comme in multiple standard colors, and it is, maybe, the video game console with the most special edition I ever see.
So our main problem here is that the WonderSwan use, on each cartridge, a custom chip named Bandai2001 or Bandai2003 and some of its function are still unknown.