- cross-posted to:
- videojuegos@feddit.cl
- linux_gaming@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- videojuegos@feddit.cl
- linux_gaming@lemmy.world
Just came across this gem. The creator also did a write-up if you wanted to replicate it yourself: https://kittenlabs.de/real-gaming-router/
Did not know GTA Vice City was a benchmark. I take it Doom was too easy and Crysis killed it?
I wanna retrofit a 4090 to my OG Xbox. Any chance, that’s happening?
Yes, you just need to open your case, remove everything, drill a few holes and put a PC in it. I wouldn’t be surprised if it was done before.
The og xbox is a pc.
Can confirm. Had the OG XBOX (Still somewhere in a Box). I installed a modchip and Linux. That beast could practically run anything like a PC. I upgraded the HDD to about 200GB back then. You could just throw in a game and make a backup on your HDD. The Controllers were basically USB Controllers with a different connector. Good times. IMHO the OG XBOX was the pinnacle of moddable consoles. Everything started to decline when the consoles began to be online 24/7 and games started to be unplayable out of the box without TBs of updates… Oh, also you actually owned your disc back then.
I still use my hacked original Xbox as my media server. Having to use FTP is annoying, but it still works great. It runs XBMC (before it became Kodi).
Not with any pci-e expansion sockets. I’m not even sure it could address a proper pci-e GPU.
… uhh… that would be because pcie wasn’t a thing yet…
it runs linux
Most of them do, I think the main achievement is getting the eGPU set up
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://piped.video/watch?v=bcjuoEZg8rI
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.
15 fps…
15 fps is actually really impressive
I’m not saying it isn’t impressive. it is. but is it worth it?
Not as a gaming device but for the novelty of doing something on a device that wasn’t designed to do said something and the attached learning experience 1000%
I’m not somewhere where I can watch a video, how does a router have a display at all? Is it streaming to a web page?
This router in particular had a socketed wifi card - like in laptops which is pci-e, they used an adapter to connect a graphics card to this (a Radeon HD thing (old)). If you can’t watch the video the creator did an article on it as well which I’ve linked in the post body
That would be pretty impressive, actually.
What’s the first song that plays in the car?
I am not in a position to Shazam it.
Electric Light Orchestra - Four Little Diamonds
Thank you, I appreciate that