Who shit in your chips? I'm sure there's people who don't like sleeves, posters, or books unused on walls either - but people do, y'know, like personal items on display. I understand you don't and that's fair enough, but simmer down a bit; it's not like I melted them down into an anatomically incorrect Katy Perry doll.
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I totally get that, and if I had the space I'd do the same. That said, I've done almost the same; listening to the albums loud whilst looking through the new booklets...just no spinning vinyl part. It's always cool when the physical packaging is something more than just media, but CDs used to be just as good there too (albeit smaller I guess). I think most CDs that came out 1995-2010ish had effort put into the packaging. Hell, even DVDs like 'And All That Could Have Been' came with that see-through plastic message from Trent which was cool. I get that the subtle crackle of vinyl might elevate the vibe and listening experience though. ...maybe one day... (if the vinyl doesn't warp due to sunlight...)
Experiencing a new album physically is something painfully missing from the ease of just buying digital music though.
I had it on the ZX Spectrum, where it was still absolutely vicious but not all that colourful! Seven year old me never completed it, even after I got it on Amiga, but I might just give it another go on seeing this. ...I can still hear the theme tune...!
For classics like Out Run, or something else?
Every now and then I turn off my ad-blockers (Pi-Hole, ABP, uBlock Origin, and Ghostery) for a particular site that I feel bad for blocking...and then re-enable them all once all the adverts -- and sheer volume of trackers -- spew data left, right, and centre. Unfortunately ad-blockers are just like condoms: they keep your machine virii-safe[r]. Much better use of your time, and likely better for a creator's pocket, is supporting them via Pateron or whatever gubbings they offer.
I also have an alternative use for uBlock Origin too -- blocking webpage elements on certain sites (such as WRC) that like to spoil things on their landing page when all you want to do is login and watch the event without being spoiled...!
It's my little one that gets the most use out of mine too, that's for sure.
As @[email protected] said elsewhere I think I enjoyed building it more than actually sitting down to replay something specific. It doesn't help that I have a million other little projects (game programming, music production, model painting, sim-racing...!) that become more interesting as I make progress on another...
Still, I'm glad my darling daughter and her friends get use out of the machine!
Making a top-level reply as I seemingly cannot reply directly to anyone who posts from kbin.social? Is this a federation issue -- or have I somehow set something up wrong?
I annoyingly couldn't see your image until I viewed your comment on kbin itself. Anyway, you say 'simple', but you may have put more effort in than me ;)
There are quite a few nice RPi projects, that's for sure...! Other than a RPi4 mini NAS-like server, I've got a couple of RPi Zeroes around the house for a house-wide music system.
If you find your RPi again and you wanted to make it a retro machine, as others here have mentioned you certainly don't have to go the whole hog; you could just install a pre-sorted distro (like RetroPie), hook it up to a TV, and use USB controllers.
The only downside was I had to cut up a copy of Killing Joke to achieve it...!
I completely agree; not getting a CRT was my biggest regret. I think the various shaders you can apply have come a long way, but you can't beat an actual CRT.
Things are certainly pricier these days, that's for sure. Depending on what country you're in you might be able to find a decent arcade supplier for the sticks/buttons -- and even the cabinet itself (I used Arcade World UK.
For the actual system itself there's plenty of options these days, and a Raspberry Pi is more than capable to power most emulators. For the wiring of sticks/buttons, YouTube has a good chunk of resources.
Given cost, it might to wise to start with the RPi set-up, and if you're happy with how that works, look into getting the arcade 'shell' for it :)
To be fair, that's all this is -- it's an RPi3 with a monitor, with the sticks/buttons plugged into a USB device. I originally wanted to build a proper tall cabinet for it, but I knew I'd never really have the room for it!
Yup, shot your opinion down hard didn't I? More like I said I understand you don't agree, but maybe tone down your vitriol. I'm not sure how I could have been more accommodating of your opinion without, well, joining your echo chamber.
Try not to pull an emergency stop with that decoration, yeah.
Also, I didn't create this to argue with people who do like their vinyl; I just wanted to promote some form of discussion in the new community. I'm glad you're enjoying the discs you've got.