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Amiga
The PAL signal format is different from the North American NTSC format. Thus, a converter box is required
Also, in Europe they prefer using a different, stronger electrical voltage. This will require you to use a heavy voltage step-up box, about $20.
LGR has had a bad experience with NTSC Amigas, but you can be able to run PAL games with just a mod.
Currently, the best Amigas that can still be used in the modern day are the following:
- Amiga 1200 - Able to use an IDE Hard drive of CompactFlash card out of the box. Has enough RAM and processing power to play almost all Amiga games
- Amiga 4000 - A larger, "tower" style Amiga.
As one amiga fan says, the rest are little more than curiosities.
In case you can't find an Amiga 1200 (at a good price, anyway); not to worry. Some modders make new Accelerator cards that push the CPU up to maximum speed, add enough RAM to play most games, and add an SDCard and compactflash slot for data storage. Thus, you can use a dirt-cheap Amiga 500 at full performance.
However, these cards are custom made, have to be shipped from Europe, and go for around 80-120 Euro (not including shipping). You should consider whether buying an Amiga 1200 is a better value before looking into this option.
Compatible Analog RGB Monitors are the critical component of the Amiga; without it, you will be forced to use the
- Commodore Color Monitor - The best option is the monitor that the Amiga came with. It's not easy to find, but it's the right choice.
- RGB RCA Cables - Convert Amiga RGB signals to plain ol' RGB jacks. However, you need a PAL TV (or at least a PAL to NTSC converter box) if you are using a PAL Amiga.
- Sony Trinitron - The LGR and I both have a special monitor that is compatible with the Amiga (and Apple ][GS). Unfortunately, the jack is very unique, and such cables are hard to find. Redmond Cable might be able to custom make one for you.
- Viper4Android
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Oculus Rift DK2
- Kinect + Oculus Rift
- Nokia Lumia 1020
- Wolfson DAC
- OpenPandora
- HTC HD2
- Nokia N900
- Sony Ericsson Series
- Compaq Pocket PC Keyboard
- Windows for DOSBox
- Libreboot/Coreboot
- Phoenix BIOS Crisis Recovery - For pre-UEFI ThinkPads.
- Bricked T430 Motherboard
- HPLIP Printers - A massive family of common and cheap printers, that you can probably find from the junkyard. Most of them use open source drivers, and all work out of the box with Linux and HPLIP. Great for printing Bitcoin paper wallets.