

There’s pixelfed for an Instagram alternative, which is based on the activitypub protocol. If flashes is built on bluesky I don’t think it will make much of a difference if the protocol is controlled by a company.
Si me conoces: tu sabes que opino tonteras, acá leerás más de eso. Si no me ubicas: espero que nos llevemos bien :)
Si eres Vicente o del trabajo: Estoy trabajando. :)
Todo es CC BY-NC-SA 4.0. Excepto fotos con mi cara, tengo todos los derechos sobre fotos que la contengan, no la uses sin permiso.


There’s pixelfed for an Instagram alternative, which is based on the activitypub protocol. If flashes is built on bluesky I don’t think it will make much of a difference if the protocol is controlled by a company.


CTR feels a lot better. While I’ve had fun playing Mario Kart with friends, CTR feels a lot more fun to master and adds a lot more challenge to its courses.


Doing some sort of equivalent would be very expensive. I imagine getting the chips and redesigning the PCB and its traces could be a lot of money.
Doing an FPGA version would also be the same. People can barely do FPGA accesible for the N64 and PSX, and even then I think there’s limitations with those implementations.
Boards trims of the Wii seem very plausible as the hardware wasn’t as complex as other consoles from the era. I have no idea about sizes, but there’s a chance the Wii has a smaller processor thanks to die shrinks.
There’s the Pixelfed app, Pixelix and PixelDroid. Of the three I’d say the most functional is PixelDroid, but the interface isn’t as good as the others. Pixelix feels faster than Pixelfed but in my phone it has an issue with JSON saying I’m unauthenticated.
The Pixelfed app works, but it’s a bit slow, and doesn’t have as much functionality as PixelDroid. PixelDroid lets you easily see all feeds (feeds for people you follow, local and global feeds), which Pixelfed somehow doesn’t let you access, which kinda destroys the point of using a federated social network.