issue113:linux_lab
Différences
Ci-dessous, les différences entre deux révisions de la page.
Les deux révisions précédentesRévision précédente | Prochaine révisionLes deux révisions suivantes | ||
issue113:linux_lab [2016/10/04 17:57] – auntiee | issue113:linux_lab [2016/10/06 11:21] – auntiee | ||
---|---|---|---|
Ligne 33: | Ligne 33: | ||
On n'a pas vu beaucoup d' | On n'a pas vu beaucoup d' | ||
- | Syd nous a mentionné que la majorité des ordinateurs n' | + | Syd nous a mentionné que la majorité des ordinateurs n' |
- | Syd also took us on a tour of his gaming collection which consists of thousands upon thousands of games for a variety of consoles. I didn’t see my families’ first console, a Coleco Gemini (a clone of an Atari 2600), but Syd assured me he had one hidden away. One of the more interesting game consoles I spotted tucked near an Odyssey 2 was Nintendo’s Famicom (Family Computer). | + | **Syd also took us on a tour of his gaming collection which consists of thousands upon thousands of games for a variety of consoles. I didn’t see my families’ first console, a Coleco Gemini (a clone of an Atari 2600), but Syd assured me he had one hidden away. One of the more interesting game consoles I spotted tucked near an Odyssey 2 was Nintendo’s Famicom (Family Computer). |
Syd’s collection of game software covers the walls of several rooms and spans a wide range of software - and this is just the non-duplicate software he has on display. Among the collections are walls of games for the Nintendo 64, Dreamcast, Playstation, | Syd’s collection of game software covers the walls of several rooms and spans a wide range of software - and this is just the non-duplicate software he has on display. Among the collections are walls of games for the Nintendo 64, Dreamcast, Playstation, | ||
- | Back in 1983, I had the chance to play the stand-up console version of Dragon’s Lair while visiting Orlando, Florida. Syd proudly proclaimed that he has the largest collection of Dragon’s Lair games with versions for almost every console and system (we didn’t see a stand-up arcade console, but Syd mentioned one was on the way). Certainly the shelves of Dragon’s Lair games and memorabilia, | + | Back in 1983, I had the chance to play the stand-up console version of Dragon’s Lair while visiting Orlando, Florida. Syd proudly proclaimed that he has the largest collection of Dragon’s Lair games with versions for almost every console and system (we didn’t see a stand-up arcade console, but Syd mentioned one was on the way). Certainly the shelves of Dragon’s Lair games and memorabilia, |
+ | |||
+ | En outre, Syd nous a montré sa collection | ||
I remember Dragon’s Lair fondly. I played Space Ace when it finally arrived where we were living, but it never felt as cool as Dragon’s Lair. A version of Dragon’s Lair exists for Steam Play (Windows and Mac OS X), but not Linux. There is an emulator called Daphne that runs on Linux for the hard-core Dragon’s Lair fans: | I remember Dragon’s Lair fondly. I played Space Ace when it finally arrived where we were living, but it never felt as cool as Dragon’s Lair. A version of Dragon’s Lair exists for Steam Play (Windows and Mac OS X), but not Linux. There is an emulator called Daphne that runs on Linux for the hard-core Dragon’s Lair fans: |
issue113/linux_lab.txt · Dernière modification : 2016/10/07 13:43 de d52fr