MealtimeVideos Cafe

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Not too short, not too long. Videos to last through your meal.

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I always loved this dude , so when i found ya guys i wanted to share him ! Talks about gas mantles on gas lamps , interesting tech for the time. Enjoy and bon apetit !

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This NES had corrupted graphics after an attempted c0pperdragon PPU digitizer install. The digitizer captures all of the signals going into the PPU (the picture processing unit) and convert the video output to Lumacode, which is a composite video signal that allows for a pixel perfect decoding of the video image by a device like the RGB2HDMI right from devices like the NES which normally only have a noisy NTSC or PAL composite video signal. Let's fix it -- and then try to fix the PPU digitizer, showing off how terrible my SMD soldering skills actually are.

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The Motorola 68000 CPU was released in 1979, to compete with the Intel 8086. The chip was designed to be powerful and versatile and made its mark by not only powering some of the most iconic and beloved games in the 1980s and 1990s, but it also ruled in the home and in the arcades. It helped define the gaming experiences of a generation and left a lasting impact on the industry. Today's episode is a love letter to one of the most influential CPU processors ever and one that many still love to write code on. Please Enjoy!

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A look at one of the greatest puzzle games ever created. Lemmings in 1991 was developed by DMA Design and published by Psygnosis. Originally releasing on the Amiga and Atari ST it has seen ports to 20 different computers and consoles and has sold over 15 million units. In this episode we take a look at Lemmings and how it changed the industry.

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Posters note: kinda click-baity title, the video is mostly about Apple hardware and when Apple did a deal with Bose for Apple branded speakers and got sued by the Beatles. With a little of SimCity.

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This is a follow-up to America's coming Weimar Moment, having a look at the situation in the US from the perspective of German experience with fascism, looking not at partisan stuff and tactical skirmishes but the overall state of the polity.

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This guy makes terrariums for a living, so the artistry in all his videos is so interesting to me.

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Arguably the biggest breakthrough for the PlayStation 3 modding scene was the discovery that Sony was fixing YLOD on backwards compatible PS3 systems by swapping in a 40nm RSX. These are the cooler running GPU's found in the PS3 Slim! And after the use of a mod chip, and reverse engineering efforts, it was eventually possible for anyone to replicate the job. Albeit with the right tools and skills, but the Frankenstein mod was born. But, there are indeed still some official PS3 frankie consoles out there, and today we're gonna take a look at one. Close up and personal where we play games, run some benchmarks, and just have a good time. Because let's face it, if a PS3 is involved; I'm experiencing pure ecstasy.

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submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

Have you ever wanted a waffle so bad that you bought a literal ton of obsolete machine tool to make it happen?

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Back in 2005, Nokia released a tablet. Well... it's not really something you would describe as a tablet today. But it let you browse the web, check email, play media, and even install some third-party software. Also it ran Linux... so you know it must've been good.

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ch ch ch ch ka CHUNK ch ch ka-CLACK-Y bomp

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