If you have been warming up to the idea of owning physical media or preserving your existing collection before it fades away, then PicoIDE should interest you.
The work of Polpotronics, this is an open source IDE/ATAPI emulator meant to replace aging tech like CD-ROM drives and hard disks. If you don’t know what those are, you probably weren’t around back then. ☠️
The job of the PicoIDE is quite simple; it can take in disk images (e.g., ISO, .bin/.cue, .vhd) from microSD cards and present them to your vintage computer as real IDE hard drives or ATAPI CD-ROM drives.
The CD audio output even works with mixed-mode discs that have redbook audio tracks, which software emulators can’t handle, they add.
Why can’t emulators handle them?
NaibofTabr@infosec.pub 4 days ago
Hmm, I think Windows and most Linux distros support mounting disk images directly at this point.
Image
Literally just
Right-click -> MountI’m not sure why you’d bother writing the disk image to an SD card and then using this hardware to mount it.
Peffse@lemmy.world 4 days ago
Because you have it reversed. This is new tech trying to interface with old tech. For when your Pentium 2 CD-ROM drive dies because a belt went bad. Or the laser is rotten. That kind of situation. Sourcing an IDE drive for old hardware is getting harder every day. (honestly, finding anything beige is getting harder)
hitstun@feddit.online 4 days ago
This is for @retrocomputing@lemmy.sdf.org . You install this in a retro PC where a physical drive would go. Your retro PC thinks your disk images are actual disks, and everything else works like it used to. It’s a nice quality-of-life improvement.
Retro game consoles have been doing this for a while. The Sega Dreamcast’s GD-ROM drive is prone to failure, so modders replace it with hardware that loads disk images. I haven’t heard of this for retro PCs before, but it makes sense.