Framerater's PSP homebrews (part 2)
Three months later, it’s time to complete the overview of the homebrew games reviewed by Framerater. Read the first part here if you haven’t already.
Read more...Three months later, it’s time to complete the overview of the homebrew games reviewed by Framerater. Read the first part here if you haven’t already.
Read more...After the creation of the first TLS 1.3 test application, a logical question might be whether the PSP can ever be cajoled into supporting WPA2.
Read more...Could Sony have been worth as much as Apple? It sounds like a ludicrous proposition in 2021. Today, Apple has enough saved up to buy every single Sony share in circulation - cash - and still have tens of billions left in the bank. Tim Apple could have Sony’s Tokyo headquarters turned into a parking lot for a laugh.
Read more...If you can’t code, you probably still know a little Python. If you got a degree in statistics, data science, or more generally made a bad decision during career orientation day, the language should have rubbed on you a little.
Read more...The PSP, along with its contemporary competitor the Nintendo DS, was part of the first generation of handhelds capable of going online. It is ironic, then, that one of the PSP’s flagship features has been almost completely lost over the years.
Read more...If you develop a game for a university assignment, does it still count as a homebrew?
Read more...The best racing fun you can have on a PSP is setting it up as an extended dashboard, before taking your car for a race on the asphalt of the Suzuka Twin Circuit.
Read more...The only version of Mugen available on PSP (save a proof of concept from a guy named Kech) is known as InfCat PSP M.U.G.E.N.
Read more...‘PSP Slim’ is a marketing term for the second revision of the first Sony handheld - the PSP 2000 (or 2001, 2004, etc., depending on the region where you bought it).
Read more...The PSP equivalent of the Windows executable, I learn today, is the .elf
file format (Executable and Linkable Format).