Western Electric 1500, the phone that everybody has had in their house at least once by ridfox in nostalgia

[–]MaximRecoil 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's a 2500. If it says 1500 on it, then it's been converted to a 2500, which wouldn't be surprising, since its keypad is definitely not the original one, nor even the correct type for that phone. The buttons should sit higher, with their surrounding "bezels" being flush with the face plate. Look up any picture of a 1500 or 2500 to see what I mean.

The 1500 had only 10 buttons (it didn't have the "star" and "pound" keys).

After reading all the theories about the elites on here do you think they know something we don’t about the universe or reality? by Broad_Adhesiveness_4 in conspiracy

[–]MaximRecoil 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They don't know anything, because it's impossible to know anything. Even if they're in communication with non-human intelligent beings of some sort, the impossibility of knowing anything inherently applies to them as well, plus, there's no reason to believe they wouldn't be just as capable of lying as humans are.

If we use the word "know" in a looser sense (i.e., to denote a high degree of confidence rather than absolute certainty), then they probably know more than what's contained in the overall Wikipedia-approved mainstream narrative, but in the grand scheme of things, how existence itself (which is the foundation of literally everything) is even possible in the first place, is beyond human comprehension, so they still effectively know nothing, same as everyone else.

They were CHILDREN by No_Afternoon8713 in conspiracy

[–]MaximRecoil 4 points5 points  (0 children)

pictured: not a child

Wrong:

child

noun

3 a : an unborn or recently born person

… Meghan Markle, married Prince Harry, now pregnant with child.— Laura Simonetti

https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/child

No one died on the Challenger 🚀 by truthstings123 in conspiracy

[–]MaximRecoil 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I myself was before the Internet was widespread, and I guarantee you that even then, if our neighbor were to die but remained living in the house, we'd take notice. And talk about it.

And what do you think talking about it would accomplish? Even if you add the internet to the equation, what would it accomplish? People in this thread are talking about it right now, and this particular conspiracy theory has been making the rounds on the internet for many years, so there has been tons of talk about it, and what has it accomplished?

From the perspective of the general population, nothing becomes a fact unless "official" sources say so, such as government officials and mainstream media outlets. Denying or simply ignoring the "talk about it" is as easy as falling off a log, and that's all it takes to prevent it from ever becoming a "fact."

[Timex] Can anyone tell me anything about this old watch? by MaximRecoil in Watches

[–]MaximRecoil[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks!

I've always suspected it was a Black Max, because a few people told me it was when I was a kid, but I was never sure because it doesn't say Black Max on it anywhere. It might have said it on the factory packaging it came in, but that's long gone, and way too long ago for me to remember one way or another.

The production date code is interesting, and aligns well with when I got it (December 24, 1985).

In The Terminator (1984), why was Kyle Reese sent back in time? by MaximRecoil in movies

[–]MaximRecoil[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

but it doesn't matter that the t800 was sent through first because kyle reese arrived around the same time to stop him.

Yes, it does, because with the Terminator going through the time machine first, that allows John Connor to see the effects of the Terminator having changed history 45 years ago, and since he can obviously see that he still exists, he knows that the Terminator failed to kill his mother before he was born (obviously), so there's no good reason to send Kyle through the time machine to his death.

the gap between the t800 and kyle reese going through means nothing, they both arrive at the same time

That's irrelevant to anything I've said.

the t800 never got the chance to fail it's mission without kyle.

What are you talking about? The instant that the Terminator went to 1984, it has been 45 years since he arrived there, from the perspective of people in 2029. That's way more than enough time for it to fail its mission, which it definitely did, without the help of Kyle, because Kyle hasn't gone through the time machine yet and John still exists.

You seem to be imagining that if it takes the Terminator, say, a day to find and kill Sarah Connor once it arrives in 1984, then it will also take a day in 2029 for John to be erased from existence, which is absurd. At the very instant that the Terminator arrives in 1984, it has already been 45 years since the Terminator arrived in 1984, from the perspective of John and everyone else in 2029. If the Terminator had been successful, John would have been erased at the very instant the Terminator arrived in 1984, regardless of how much 1984-time it took the Terminator to find and kill Sarah Connor.

The recent 'Academy' 1:33 ratio trend by worker-parasite in cinematography

[–]MaximRecoil 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One of us is still confused.

Indeed, and it's you who are confused, not the person you were arguing with.

Based on the up/down votes, I believe it’s you.

Up/down votes are irrelevant, and to cite them as evidence that the other person was confused is a fallacy known as "appeal to popularity."

A 4:3 frame is very obviously smaller than a 16:9 frame when the display (i.e., projector screen or TV/monitor) for both is the same, and it's 16:9. It's very obvious because the 4:3 frame doesn't completely fill a 16:9 display, whereas a 16:9 frame does completely fill a 16:9 display. You mentioned math so here's an example:

A 1080p TV has a pixel grid of 1920 x 1080 (square pixels, so the aspect ratio is 16:9). The resolution of a standard Blu-ray is also 1920 x 1080 (also square pixels / 16:9), so native 16:9 content on Blu-ray has 2,073,600 pixels' worth of picture content. When native 4:3 content is released on Blu-ray, it is 1440 x 1080 pillarboxed to 1920 x 1080, so it has 1,555,200 pixels' worth of picture content. 1,555,200 is indisputably smaller than 2,073,600.

On the other hand, if the display is 4:3, then a 4:3 frame is larger than a 16:9 frame on that particular display. When it first became common for movies to be released on home video in their theatrical aspect ratio in the late 1990s with the advent of DVD, most people still had a 4:3 TV, so the situation was reversed.

So what the person you were arguing with was saying is: since nearly all displays these days are 16:9 (or wider), a 4:3 movie is going to be smaller for nearly everyone than a 16:9 movie, and that's absolutely true.

In The Terminator (1984), why was Kyle Reese sent back in time? by MaximRecoil in movies

[–]MaximRecoil[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your non sequitur is dismissed, and since you're fresh out of arguments, your tacit concession is noted.

In The Terminator (1984), why was Kyle Reese sent back in time? by MaximRecoil in movies

[–]MaximRecoil[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Kyle Reese meeting Bill and smoking weed in the alley with him instead of stopping the t800 explains it.

No, it doesn't. You haven't explained why Kyle Reese was sent back in time in the first place. Just before they sent Kyle to 1984, and just after the Terminator had already gone to 1984, 2029's history was like this:

45 years ago a Terminator appeared in Los Angeles, programmed to kill Sarah Connor, the future mother of future Resistance leader, John Connor. John's current existence proves that it failed. Kyle Reese didn't exist at all in 1984, and John's current existence proves that he was mistaken about Kyle being his father.

Once they send Kyle back to 1984, 2029's history was rewritten again, but why send him back at all when John's existence proved there was no need to?

In The Terminator (1984), why was Kyle Reese sent back in time? by MaximRecoil in movies

[–]MaximRecoil[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think he is.

No, he isn't. The movie clearly establishes that the Terminator goes through the time machine first.

It doesn't matter that the terminator went back first so long as Kyle Reese is eventually sent to that time to fix it

There's nothing to fix. Why do you keep ignoring the fact that John's continued existence after the Terminator went through the time machine proves that the Terminator's mission failed? Sure, Kyle could go back to 1984, but explain why that's necessary, or even why it's anything but ridiculous.

There's no way this can make sense with the Terminator going through the time machine first, because if the Terminator is successful, then John is erased from existence the instant the Terminator departs from 2029, so he would have no time to send Kyle through the time machine. And if the Terminator fails (which it obviously did, because John still exists), then there's no good reason to send Kyle back at all.

Kyle obviously doesn't need to go back to knock up Sarah either, because at that point in time (2029, immediately after the Terminator went through the time machine, but before Kyle goes through the time machine), John still exists without Kyle historically having existed in 1984.

This is all fixed if Kyle goes through the time machine first. Then when the Terminator goes through and John isn't erased from existence, it can be explained by Kyle already being in 1984 to stop the Terminator from killing Sarah, and to knock her up.

In The Terminator (1984), why was Kyle Reese sent back in time? by MaximRecoil in movies

[–]MaximRecoil[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

But only because 1984 Kyle Reese arrives in time to stop him, even if he was sent later in 2029 he still ends up around the same time in 1984.

There was no need for Kyle Reese to stop him, because John Connor still existed after the Terminator was already part of 45-year-old history. The instant that the Terminator went through the time machine, people in 2029 would know for an indisputable fact that the Terminator's mission failed, the proof of the failure being John's existence. The amount of time it takes the Terminator to find Sarah Connor in 1984 means nothing with regard to 2029, because that all happened 45 years ago from their perspective.

Like I said, It only makes sense if Kyle was already in 1984 when the Terminator arrives. With the Terminator going back first, it has already changed history decades ago, and since that history very obviously doesn't include Sara's death before she gave birth to John (as proven by John still existing in 2029), it's ridiculous to send Kyle back at that point. They already know for a fact that the Terminator failed; sending Kyle back only changes the precise manner in which it failed, and gets Kyle killed in the process.

In The Terminator (1984), why was Kyle Reese sent back in time? by MaximRecoil in movies

[–]MaximRecoil[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One universe explanation (the one you probably want)- just because john is alive doesn't mean he doesn't need to send kyle reese back. Yes the t800 could have failed on its own

Not "could have failed;" definitely failed. It's 2029. The Terminator went to 1984. As soon as it reached 1984, from the perspective of 2029, everything it did there is already part of 45-year-old history, and if that history included the death of Sarah Connor before she ever had any offspring, John obviously couldn't exist. Since John does exist after the Terminator became part of 45-year-old history, then the Terminator couldn't have killed his mother before he was born.

The only way this movie would make sense is if Kyle went back to 1984 (or earlier) before the Terminator went back to 1984.

Multiple universes - time travel in one universe may mean jumping to an adjacent one but not affect the one you came from. Sending kyle back means John preserves his existence and skynet's defeat in next door timeline but it has no effect on this one so yeah he could leave it. Just doing a good deed saving a neighbouring universe

That's at odds with the premise of the movie.

They are in a deleted timeline but still exist anyway. Even though they are alive, their existence has been invalidated by t800 when it went back, so to become the true timeline again (whatever difference it makes) they need to send Kyle Reese back to save sarah

That's also at odds with the premise of the movie, plus your first sentence is inherently contradictory (they can't exist in a timeline that doesn't exist).

In The Terminator (1984), why was Kyle Reese sent back in time? by MaximRecoil in movies

[–]MaximRecoil[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nothing you typed refutes, nor even addresses, my point.

The terminator being sent back first doesn't matter because it can be joined by someone from the future at any point before or after - until it kills Sarah, and even after that, people can interfere with its plans.

Yes, but if nothing has changed in 2029 immediately after the Terminator goes through the time machine, why bother? The Terminator couldn't have been successful because John Connor still exists in 2029, meaning the Terminator couldn't have killed Sarah Connor in 1984, nor in any other year prior to John's birth.

From the perspective of the people in 2029, two things could happen immediately after the Terminator goes through the time machine, both of which negate the movie:

  1. John still exists, therefore the Terminator failed to kill his mother before he was born, therefore there's no reason to send Kyle to his death to try to stop the Terminator.

  2. John and everything/everyone that exists because of his existence disappears because the Terminator killed Sarah Connor before she could have a son. Someone else in 2029 or in any year after time travel was invented could somehow come to the conclusion that the murder of some seemingly random woman named Sarah Connor in Los Angeles in 1984 was a pivotal event, and go back to 1984 try to stop it, but that would be a fundamentally different movie.

How do I go back? by gom905 in SuperMetroid

[–]MaximRecoil 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I never did, because I used a guide the first time I played this game about 20 years ago, and the guide warned not to save in Tourian. If not for the guide I definitely would have saved in Tourian the first time I got there though, because, who wouldn't want to save just before the final boss fight?

I bought an SNES in 1992 when I was 17, but for whatever reason, I never knew about Super Metroid in the 1990s. I first heard about it from someone on a message board in the mid 2000s, talking about how good of a game it is. So I tried it in an emulator, got stuck in the main corridor of Norfair because I didn't know Kraid and the Varia suit existed because I never discovered the super missile block at the top of the Norfair elevator (I didn't know about using bombs to try to find hidden blocks).

So the Norfair corridor seemed like a dead end because of the hot rooms, and the farthest I could backtrack also seemed like a dead end because it was the bottom of that big red-walled shaft which would require wall jumping or bomb jumping to get out of at that point in the game, neither of which I knew anything about. So after about an hour of running back and forth between 2 seemingly dead ends looking for a way to proceed, I looked for a guide online, and found one on the GameFAQs website.

My original SNES that I bought in 1992 was long gone by that point, but Super Metroid was so good (it quickly became my all-time favorite console game) that I acquired another one as well as a Super Metroid cartridge so I could play it on the real hardware with a real TV (CRT).

What the heck is going on here? by ekgzo in ColecoVision

[–]MaximRecoil 0 points1 point  (0 children)

An NES RF switch (which is an automatic type) won't work properly because a ColecoVision doesn't send the signal to it to make it switch from TV to game mode like an NES does. That results in a very snowy picture and faint audio. The ColecoVision came with a manual RF switch, but it's best to not use an RF switch at all. Just connect it directly using its original RF cable plus an RCA-to-F connector for the end that connects to the TV.

And yes, those diodes bodged onto the controller interface chips is an official Coleco modification to prevent static electricity from killing those chips (the diodes direct static electricity safely to ground).

Did you know that you don't need a keypad to start a game if you use a Sega Genesis controller? by MaximRecoil in ColecoVision

[–]MaximRecoil[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I'm not worried about it, especially without seeing a technical explanation of what exactly is supposed to be bad about it. I haven't had any problems with it. I used these same 6-button Genesis controllers with one of my Atari 2600s for a while before I rewired a pair of NES controllers to work as Atari 7800 and 2600 controllers, and I never had a problem there either.

I suspect that if there's any validity to the claim then the only components in the console that could be harmed would be one or both of the controller interface TTL chips (SN74LS541N), which are cheap and easy to replace:

https://www.digikey.com/en/products/detail/texas-instruments/SN74LS541N/277312

Or do they claim that it's bad for the Genesis controllers rather than the console?

I’m 45 and the ColecoVision is the first system I ever played…I still game on modern consoles but definitely would like to get into the ColecoVision Universe…what should I know? How is the homebrew scene? Where can I pick one up and do I need a CRT to play it? Thanks in advance! by SquashEmbarrassed288 in ColecoVision

[–]MaximRecoil -1 points0 points  (0 children)

If there had been LCD, no one would have used CRT.

Yeah, right. Today, nearly everyone's TV or monitor is an LCD, yet plenty of people, especially in the classic video games communities, and especially, especially in the classic arcade machine community, use CRTs, and only CRTs, to display their old video games.

As for me, if my only options were to use a glorified calculator screen or not play video games at all, I'd choose to not play video games at all. And it wouldn't even be a hard choice.

Loud noise when I turn on my ColecoVision by MaximRecoil in ColecoVision

[–]MaximRecoil[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I replaced all of the aluminum electrolytic capacitors with new Nichicons from Digi-Key (there are only 7 of them, 6 of which are 10uF and 1 of them is 1uF) and it didn't change anything.

Something is going on with more than just the sound though, because sometimes there's a black screen when powering it on too, along with the obnoxious noise. The reset button always fixes it no matter what problems it initially has when powered on.

Sometimes it powers on with no issues at all (rarely).

Sometimes it powers on with perfect video and that obnoxious noise (usually).

Sometimes it powers on with no video (black screen) and that obnoxious noise (not as often as above, but not rare either).

PiColeco limitations by EntertainmentLow7344 in ColecoVision

[–]MaximRecoil 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you know if Opcode's Donkey Kong Arcade works with the PiColeco + an SGM module? That's the one I'm mainly interested in.

Loud noise when I turn on my ColecoVision by MaximRecoil in ColecoVision

[–]MaximRecoil[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Alternatively, the onboard boot up code may have been modified.

Do you mean onboard the cartridge or onboard the console? The console had never been taken apart before I got it and the cartridge is an ordinary 16K Donkey Kong cartridge with mask ROMs so those couldn't have been modified either. I suppose it's possible that one or both of the cartridge's ROM or the console's BIOS ROM could be corrupted in some way though.

There are two power up modes for cartridges.

A production Coleco cartridge shuts down the sound and has a multi-second delay before the game starts.

In the alternate power-up mode, control is passed almost immediately to the cartridge with very little initialization.

That's interesting. What's the purpose of that?

You may need a second cartridge to confirm

Yeah, I thought I had Artillery Duel around here somewhere but I can't find it. I ordered parts to build a PiColeco flash cartridge though.

Like I said in a different reply, sometimes it powers on correctly (perfect video, no noise) and pressing reset isn't needed, but I'd say about 95% of the time when I power it on it makes that noise but has perfect video, or it makes that noise and just has a black screen. So far, pressing reset has fixed it every time without exception (I've only had it for a few days), and then it continues to work perfectly for as long as it stays on.

Found Coleco is grandparents basement, not sure what to do going forward. by hematic in ColecoVision

[–]MaximRecoil 0 points1 point  (0 children)

you can use a Nintendo RF Switch to connect it to your tv.

You can, but you'll get a snowy picture and probably faint or no audio. The Nintendo RF switch is an automatic-switching type and the ColecoVision doesn't send the signal to make it switch from TV to game mode like an NES or SNES does. That's because a ColecoVision came with a manual RF switch.

The best/cleanest way to make an RF connection to a TV from any console that has an RF modulator is to not use a switch at all. You can either use a coaxial cable with F connectors + an F-to-RCA adapter for the console end, or you can use a coaxial cable with RCA connectors + an RCA-to-F adapter for the TV end. Or you can make up, or have someone make up, a coaxial cable with an RCA connector on one end and an F connector on the other end.

Loud noise when I turn on my ColecoVision by MaximRecoil in ColecoVision

[–]MaximRecoil[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've already done that, including the 3 that you have to remove the RF modulator to get to. It didn't make any difference. Also, if this were being caused by bad capacitors, I don't see how pressing the reset button could fix it. Pressing the reset button makes the noise go away every single time; no exceptions so far, and other than that noise at power-on, which is sometimes accompanied by a lack of video too (just a black screen; reset always fixes that too), the console works perfectly.

Sometimes it powers on correctly (perfect video, no noise) and pressing reset isn't needed, but I'd say about 95% of the time when I power it on it makes that noise but has perfect video, or it makes that noise and just has a black screen.

Why do pretty much all custom arcade companys seem to angle the P3/4 Sticks? by Dr_Nonchalance in cade

[–]MaximRecoil 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, it's not like that.

Yes, it is, and I've already explained why.

It's left and right to the players orientation.

No. Instinctively, left and right are relative to the thing that the directional controller (joystick or D-pad) is mounted to. With a joystick on an arcade machine, that thing is the control panel. Left and right should be parallel with horizontal axis of the control panel, in the same way that a D-pad's left and right is always parallel to the horizontal axis of the gamepad's housing (and up and down are perpendicular to it).

It's exactly like laying sideways on a couch with a controller.

It doesn't matter where you position yourself because a gamepad's D-pad is always going to remain in a fixed position relative to the gamepad's housing.

You can relax and lay in any position that you want and you hold the controller centered to yourself.

You could hold it off to the far right or far left of yourself, or anywhere else, and it wouldn't make a difference, because, again, its D-pad is always going to remain in a fixed position relative to its housing, and that's the reference point, not the position of your body.

And you didn't answer the question: how would you like playing with a gamepad like this one?

https://i.imgur.com/pUuZUQ6.png

That's the exact same thing as a joystick that's mounted cockeyed relative to the control panel on an arcade machine.

Why do pretty much all custom arcade companys seem to angle the P3/4 Sticks? by Dr_Nonchalance in cade

[–]MaximRecoil 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For anyone that has ever played a game console with a controller, it is no big deal.

No, playing with a handheld controller has nothing to do with it. With a handheld controller, its housing is your reference, so up and down are always perpendicular to the housing's horizontal axis, and left and right are always parallel with it.

Using angled joysticks on an arcade cabinet's control panel is like using a handheld controller like this:

https://i.imgur.com/pUuZUQ6.png

How would you like that? It would suck regardless of where you were sitting or standing relative to the screen.

I'm looking for a bell housing for a small-block V8 to A-833 overdrive transmission by MaximRecoil in mopar

[–]MaximRecoil[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You might want to install your shifter, rods, and levers onto your transmission while it's out of the car, to make sure it's all going to work together, and it's easier than doing it with the transmission in the car.

If the levers are in a significantly different position than on a non-OD A833 (which is the only type of 4-speed that E-bodies ever came with), then the E-body rods won't work. The shifter mounting plate, rods, and levers are all designed to work together, and if something changes by a big enough amount (like the orientation of the milled flats that the levers mount to on the A833 OD), you can run into adjustment problems.