--- Bryan Pope <bpope at wordstock.com> wrote:
And thusly were the wise words spake by Jim Leonar
d
>
> A mutual acquaintance of mine is trying to write
a
thesis and needs a
little help. He writes:
"The project that I am working on is for my
Masters in Library
Information Science degree with a focus on
Archiving. For my paper I
have to write a 10 to 12 page paper on a subject
that involves the
preservation of something that has archival
significance. So I decided
to do it on video games and what steps are being
taken to preserve them
> on the media that they were originally written o
n
such as Atari and
Nintendo cartridges some of which are degrading
significantly and no
> longer work on the game systems they were design
ed
for."
If anyone has any help or leads for him, or any
experience archiving
> ROMs/cartridges that may degrade over time and h
ow
to properly preserve
them, please drop him a line at
"andrew.pacilli at simmons.edu". Your
input can shape an archivist's future :-)
For Atari 2600, can you not just take a .bin
downloaded from AtariAge
and burn it to a suitable EPROM that is then
installed on a suitable
cartridge PCB? AtariAge even sells everything you
need to make your
own cartridges. As for Nintendo, I believe they
will be releasing
their back catalog for play on their new console,
Wii.
Cheers,
Bryan
Thats not strictly true. Nintendo are releasing
*their* games for their old machines, such
as the SNES (aka Super Famicom in Japan), for
play on the Wii (pronounced "we" - it
apparently means "all" in Japanese)
However, there are about 2500 (perhaps more?)
SNES games of which only 100 or so are by
Nintendo.
Plus, what about the games by companies that
no longer exist, such as Psygnosis (bought by
Sony around 1999), Bitmap Brothers (ok, still
around but appear to be dead), Probe (dead),
US Gold and their subsidiary Kixx (dead) and
many others.
Regards,
Andrew B
aliensrcooluk at yahoo.co.uk