I found the only reason I was attracted to the psp was because of the ease of cracking it. For about $60 you could get a magic battery and a j-stick. That let you go rent a game rip it and throw it onto a hard drive. Boot the game straight from the memory card which was surprisingly not a Sony proprietary card but a regular micro SD. Same reason I still have my third gen Kindle. I can download all the books for free.
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I can download all the books for free
How?!
I have a D01100 its a gen4 (my mistake). I just plug it into my computer or phone and transfer an epub right onto it. I never hooked it to an account. I even have a program to convert Manga but it's been awhile since I did that and I honestly can't even remember the name of the program or how it works. Had this thing since 07 so...
I google the book I want to read with "epub", download the file, plug my phone directly into my Kindle and use the file system just like I used to on a PC. Never really had to do much more than that.
Damn. TIL.
Would that be a problem with newer Kindle versions?
I'm not really sure. I'm fairly sure the fire is locked down to not let you do this kind of stuff but I have two gen4 and have never bought another.
For PSP development, PPSSPP can be very good if configured correctly and you know how to use it.
You can debug on a PSP using psplink but compared to PPSSPP it's a nuisance to do it every single time. Plus, using a GUI debugger is way nicer anyway.
What really fascinated me was Sony's approach. For all intents and purposes, it was on par with the PS2 or even better (because of more memory).
Yeah sure, the VUs coupled with the GS throughput were better for graphics processing than the Media Engine in the PSP, but the devil is in the details.
But unlike the PS2, it has a real OS that is capable of loading modules and even do some fake multitasking! This was groundbreaking for the time and this is what made it so magical for homebrew IMO.