DoubleFlush's hazardous adventures!
Posted: Fri Oct 07, 2016 3:47 pm
Hi!
Please forgive the flamboyant title.
A thorough introduction is in order, before i start throwing the silly questions about.
I am an engineer in the making, studying Informatics and Automation in Norway. Programming is my passion (profession-wise), and i aim to get a masters degree in that field once i am done with my bachelor's degree. I have little/no real experience with electronics (other than the odd dissassembly of a broken unit "to see how it works" as a youth), but i have a father who has dabbled in electronics, and i have a fierce curiosity and a strong will to learn.
Several times have i stumbled upon videos on raspberry pies used to emulate old-school games, and having grown up with a gameboy never out of arm's reach, the idea instantly caught my imagination. It was, however, not until i saw Wermy's thorough tutorials and wonderful end-results, and found out the scope of the community surrounding this phenom, that i decided i would try my hand at making something myself.
I then quickly reached a couple of conclusions; the first of which being that the finished product will (hopefully) be gifted to my sister, on her birthday (in May).
The rest of the conclusions require some back-story, that isn't entirely necessary to read, if you're of the impatient type (in which case i appologise for my already longwinded style of writing).
~Story-time warning~
When i was young (somewhere around 10, i believe) my parents took my sister and I on an amazing vacation through Turkey. We were trekking halfway through the country (which, i promise, is farther than you may think) by bus. It was a journey of round about two days of constant bus-riding. Hour upon dreary hour of blistering heat in an elongated tin can on wheels, packed to the brim of hairy, smelly, angry-looking people, who certainly did not enjoy children playing around on the bus.
My sister and i desperately needed a temporary escape. And while i had, just earlier the same year, broken my gameboy (in a manner which i cannot for the life of me remember), my sister had hers yet. She had been given her gameboy the previous summer, along with a Barbie game. It was the first console she had ever owned, and she treasured it. It was her pride. It was one of those light-blue semi-opaque GBAs. And being the sweet little sister she is, she let me get turns to play, when she had every right to deny me. And thus we passed the long hours.
It wasn't until a while after we had stepped off the bus that we realised the GBA was no longer with us. In the bustle of leaving the bus, I (being the last to play) had somehow left the GBA on the bus, along with the Barbie game, and the bootleg "LoZ: a link to the past" game we had bought in a back-alley of a tourist-trap of a town. And while i presume it made some turkish child quite happy, this was of no consolidation to my sister. She was devastated. As was i, being riddled with guilt. She eventually forgave me, however, kind as she is, and was later on given a bright pink DS with nitendogs, and all was forgotten. Almost.
~Story-time over~
Now, i've done some light research (emphasis on "light"), and i understand that most newbies such as I will most times be told to start out safe, with a GBZ project. And i understand why, the case invariably being larger, and thus more forgiving of the inevitable mistakes one makes as one learns. However, as i'm sure you understand, this is no real option to me. The only real option is to make a light blue, semi-opaque GBA. I understand this is far more difficult, and i am willing to face the consequences of this choice. I do not shy away from a challenge, and if the community here is as good as my first impression has led me to believe it is, i will do just fine.
Now, for a wish-list of features i want in the product:
-GBA form-factor
-Runs Retro-Pi
-Has additional X and Y buttons, to facilitate PsP games (most do not use the joystick (of which i have no plans to include))
-Runs off a rechargeable battery, charged by usb
-Easily accessible HDMI port (not a must)
As i am fresh off the boat here, i'm going to have to ask anyone and everyone: what components will i need?
i figure the first step in building this is knowing the components required, and then figure out how to put it all together.
input please!
Please forgive the flamboyant title.
A thorough introduction is in order, before i start throwing the silly questions about.
I am an engineer in the making, studying Informatics and Automation in Norway. Programming is my passion (profession-wise), and i aim to get a masters degree in that field once i am done with my bachelor's degree. I have little/no real experience with electronics (other than the odd dissassembly of a broken unit "to see how it works" as a youth), but i have a father who has dabbled in electronics, and i have a fierce curiosity and a strong will to learn.
Several times have i stumbled upon videos on raspberry pies used to emulate old-school games, and having grown up with a gameboy never out of arm's reach, the idea instantly caught my imagination. It was, however, not until i saw Wermy's thorough tutorials and wonderful end-results, and found out the scope of the community surrounding this phenom, that i decided i would try my hand at making something myself.
I then quickly reached a couple of conclusions; the first of which being that the finished product will (hopefully) be gifted to my sister, on her birthday (in May).
The rest of the conclusions require some back-story, that isn't entirely necessary to read, if you're of the impatient type (in which case i appologise for my already longwinded style of writing).
~Story-time warning~
When i was young (somewhere around 10, i believe) my parents took my sister and I on an amazing vacation through Turkey. We were trekking halfway through the country (which, i promise, is farther than you may think) by bus. It was a journey of round about two days of constant bus-riding. Hour upon dreary hour of blistering heat in an elongated tin can on wheels, packed to the brim of hairy, smelly, angry-looking people, who certainly did not enjoy children playing around on the bus.
My sister and i desperately needed a temporary escape. And while i had, just earlier the same year, broken my gameboy (in a manner which i cannot for the life of me remember), my sister had hers yet. She had been given her gameboy the previous summer, along with a Barbie game. It was the first console she had ever owned, and she treasured it. It was her pride. It was one of those light-blue semi-opaque GBAs. And being the sweet little sister she is, she let me get turns to play, when she had every right to deny me. And thus we passed the long hours.
It wasn't until a while after we had stepped off the bus that we realised the GBA was no longer with us. In the bustle of leaving the bus, I (being the last to play) had somehow left the GBA on the bus, along with the Barbie game, and the bootleg "LoZ: a link to the past" game we had bought in a back-alley of a tourist-trap of a town. And while i presume it made some turkish child quite happy, this was of no consolidation to my sister. She was devastated. As was i, being riddled with guilt. She eventually forgave me, however, kind as she is, and was later on given a bright pink DS with nitendogs, and all was forgotten. Almost.
~Story-time over~
Now, i've done some light research (emphasis on "light"), and i understand that most newbies such as I will most times be told to start out safe, with a GBZ project. And i understand why, the case invariably being larger, and thus more forgiving of the inevitable mistakes one makes as one learns. However, as i'm sure you understand, this is no real option to me. The only real option is to make a light blue, semi-opaque GBA. I understand this is far more difficult, and i am willing to face the consequences of this choice. I do not shy away from a challenge, and if the community here is as good as my first impression has led me to believe it is, i will do just fine.
Now, for a wish-list of features i want in the product:
-GBA form-factor
-Runs Retro-Pi
-Has additional X and Y buttons, to facilitate PsP games (most do not use the joystick (of which i have no plans to include))
-Runs off a rechargeable battery, charged by usb
-Easily accessible HDMI port (not a must)
As i am fresh off the boat here, i'm going to have to ask anyone and everyone: what components will i need?
i figure the first step in building this is knowing the components required, and then figure out how to put it all together.
input please!