New Mame Release, Turning Media Center to an Arcade Machine

Gaming November 3rd, 2007

Yesterday saw the release of the new MAME 0.120, the Multi-Arcade Machine Emulator. If you’re using Windows, you’ll find MAME32, the Windows port for MAME more to your liking (The following FAQ describes the difference)

When I noticed this new milestone, on top of the fact that the XBOX360 arcade at the Microsoft Visitors Center reminded me of how much I miss these oldies (especially Street Fighter II) I just had to get some games working on my laptop.

Quick steps for getting arcade games to run on your machine:

  1. Download and extract MAME32
  2. Get some games (ROMs)
    • I found what I was looking for at http://www.rom-world.com
    • The MAME FAQ specifies the following legal options:

      (1) Search for auctions (on eBay for example) of the actual arcade circuit boards, and buy a ROM reader device to copy the ROM chips’ contents into files.

      (2) Buy the HotRod Joystick control panel. It is bundled with a CD that includes MAME and a few 100% legal Capcom ROMs. Hanaho also sells the ArcadePC cabinet with a different selection of legal Capcom ROMs.

      (3) Buy legal Atari arcade game ROMs from StarROMs for prices varying between $2.00 and $6.00. You can even get one free game for signing up!

      (4) There are also three free ROM sets available right on the official MAME site, in the miscellaneous downloads page.

  3. Start MAME32 and browse to the game you’ve downloaded. Check the directory name (on the Directory column) and copy the game to a sub-folder with that name under the roms folder.
  4. Double-click to run the game…

Now how about taking you arcade experience to the next level?

xarcadedualAfter a short search on the net I found GameEx which is a graphical front-end for MAME (and a bunch of other emulators) that integrates with Windows Media Center allowing you to simply browse and launch your game your game directly from your Media Center interface.

And not to complete the experience arcade joysticks. A company called XGaming is selling a Two-Player Arcade Joystick for about 130$. There are also XBox 360 arcade joysticks available out there that can be used with a PC using a proper adapter.

So it turns out that I can upgrade my Home Theater PC to a full fledged arcade machine that would kick XBox360 Arcade’s ass in about 150$ (15$ for GameEx and ~130$ for joysticks)

Should be an interesting project to get this thing running once I get back to Israel…

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Windows Vista Media Center

Technology September 29th, 2007

About a week ago, after a brief conversation about it with Dror I’ve set to convert my old machine to be a Home Theater PC.

I really wanted an HTPC. But after my last horrible experience buying an out-of-the-box HTPC I was pretty skeptic I’ll make another attempt at it any time soon.
After I got my new PC recently I just had the old one lying around. I’ve installed Windows Home Server on it which was working nice but not all that useful.
Talking to Dror I realized that upgrading my old machine to a basic HTPC simply involves a 380nis expense on a good TV card (Hauppauge WinTV-PVR 150).
Given this new realization, I decided to spend the money required on an initial proof of concept to see the system working. I would then upgrade whatever’s necessary to make it decent.

Phase I - Initial Setup

I bought the card and spent the other day building and configuring my basic HTPC setup.
My current spec is as follows:

  • Intel Pentium 4, 2275 MHz (17 x 134)
  • MSI 645E Max-C Motherboard
  • Gainward GeForce FX 5200 (AGP 4x, 128MB)
  • Hauppage WinTV-PVR 150 MCE (Comes with Media Center remote and IR Blaster. Everything you need to get a Media Center installation up and running)
  • 360GB Storage

IMG_0880

The great news is that it has been working perfectly for 2 days now. I’m ecstatic!

However, it’s not perfect. It makes a lot of noise and, as you can see from the picture, looks kinda ugly in my living room.
It also has a wired keyboard and no mouse which makes things difficult when it comes to doing things the MCE remote can’t do.
Anyway, this leads us to the next phase of my Media Center experiment…

Phase II - Upgrades

There are upgrades I intend to make in the near future:

  • Case

The current case is ugly, has a poor cooling system and makes a lot of noise so obviously I need a new, decent case.
I’ve been reading about all sort of heat problems with HTPC cases and I’m tempted to go with another Antec P180 which already proved to be a huge success on my other PC.

LC17

  • Motherboard

My current motherboard is old. I want to get a new one that supports USB 2.0 and SATA so I could expand my storage later on. The problem is that Socket 478 motherboards are hard to come by these days. Can anyone in Israel recommend a store that still has such boards in stock?

  • Keyboard\Mouse

I need an inexpensive wireless keyboard with a mouse-wheel on it. The Microsoft® Remote Keyboard for Windows® XP Media Center Edition seems like a sensible choice so I’ll probably be ordering this one as soon as possible.
Microsoft Remote Keyboard for Windows® XP Media Center Edition

  • PCI Wireless Device

Because my 3com wireless USB device doesn’t work well. Its slow and it fails to copy files between my two machines.
DLink DWA-547

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