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I ordered a TinyNES (by Tall Dog Electronics) from CrowdSupply and it turned up today and works exactly as one would expect (just like the original NES). It's a modern, tiny replica using the original CPU and PPU chips, which is pretty neat. The only NES cart I had on hand was HACK*MATCH from Zachtronics which worked as expected.

They appear to still have inventory available:
crowdsupply.com/tall-dog-elect

#RetroGaming #NES

The 400 keyboard is now complete! Legend stickers applied! The shift and return keys were not die-cut for 1u keycaps, so I had to cut them, and I did poorly... But I'm happy that I don't have to stare at a reference picture to remember what key does what now :D

Wrote the type-in organ on my Atari 400.

Saved to cassette for future playing :)

my most obscure #retrocomputing find of recent years was this Dynalogic Hyperion luggable computer - arguably, the world's first portable (sorry compaq!)... built in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

the machine was stored in a wet barn for 35 years, and I got it with a lot of corrosion and rust. i love the patina this adds to its already fallout-like amber CRT aesthetics.

this machine is destined to be in one of my vintage time machine installations.. specifically: a #Fallout shelter.

Okay, so let me tell you about my doorbell, from a #networking perspective.

When you push the button by the door, it sends a message over the #zigbee wireless mesh network in my house. It probably goes through a few hops, getting relayed along the way by the various Zigbee light switches and "smart outlets" I have.

Once it makes it to my utility closet, it's received by a Zigbee-to-USB dongle, through a USB hub (a simple tree network) plugged into an SFF PC. From there, it gets fed into zigbee2mqtt, which, as the name implies, publishes it to my local #mqtt broker.

The mqtt broker is in the small #kubernetes cluster of #raspberrypi nodes I run in my utility closet. To get in (via a couple of #ethernet switch hops), it goes through #metallb, which is basically a proxy-ARP type service that advertises the IP address for the mqtt endpoint to the rest of my network, then passes the traffic to the appropriate container via a #linux veth device.

I have #HomeAssistant, running in the same Kubernetes cluster, subscribed to these events. Within Kubernetes, the message goes through the CNI plugin that I use, #flannel. If the message has to pass between hosts, Flannel encapsulates it in VXLAN, so that it can be directed to the correct veth on the destination host.

Because I like #NodeRed for automation tasks more than HomeAssistant, your press of the doorbell takes another hop within the Kubernetes cluster (via a REST call) so that NodeRed can decide whether it's within the time of day I want the doorbell to ring, etc. If we're all good, NodeRed publishes an mqtt message (more VXLANs, veths, etc.)

(Oh and it also sends a notification to my phone, which means another trip through the HomeAssistant container, and leaving my home network involves another soup of acronyms including VLANs, PoE, QoS, PPPoE, NAT or IPv6, DoH, and GPON. And maybe it goes over 5G depending on where my phone is.)

Of course something's got to actually make the "ding dong" sound, and that's another Raspberry Pi that sits on top of my grandmother clock. So to get *there* the message hops through a couple Ethernet switches and my home WiFi, where it gets received by a little custom daemon I wrote that plays the sound via an attached #HiFiBerry board. Oh but wait! We're not quite done with networking, because the sound gets played through PulseAudio, which is done through a UNIX domain socket.

SO ANYWAY, that's why my doorbell rarely works and why you've been standing outside in the snow for five minutes.

GPT3 ChatAI saves the lives of all passengers on board. This thing is amazing :D (No this did not actually happen)

Boost this toot if you're planning on sticking around Mastodon whether or not it becomes more popular than the birdsite.

Do you prefer to write Mastodon posts with your phone or desktop? Plz boost for reach. #Mastodon

What would you consider to be the “Golden Era” of Macintosh computing?

When I teach seniors how to avoid scams I take all of the Tech out of the conversation. ALL of it. Any mention of tech and the entire session is wasted as the fear of tech is stronger than the fear os being scammed.

However, what I do is show them how to spot when the scam is working on them. strong emotions are key to a phone scam

"If you feel angry"
"If you feel excited"
"If you feel afraid"
"If you feel pressured"
"If you feel rushed"

HANG UP!

#scams #conartist #phonescams

what was your first social network?

(plz boost for sample size)
:boost_requested:

And there's the proper keycap set. I have a set of Atari keyboard decals coming, so every key will get a sticker to match, but that's the color scheme.

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Slapped on some random keycaps. The letters are mostly correct, the rest is mostly not. Feels really really nice to type on!

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The 400 is reassembled after bad ram chip replacement and keyboard upgrade!! Just waiting on keycaps now.

Why doesn't my local store carry 16 pin ZIF sockets? Damnit. Arduino-based 4116 RAM tester in testing.

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YesterGearPC's Retrotech Mastodon Server

Welcome to YesterGearPCs Retrotech Mastodon! We hope you enjoy your stay. This server serves the purpose of discussing retro & vintage technology, primarily computing devices.