![]() ![]() If I can be bothered to find one of those Vodoo cards, maybe Quake 3 could be a possibility. Mara'akate has been after me for some time to do Quake II, but I just kept putting it off until all those servers in the Netherlands shuttered basically killing off QuakeWorld. Oddly enough I had QuakeWorld running on the first shot, since it's basically Quake as far as the system support stuff is involved. ![]() Then after some asking I did QuakeWorld, I never played it before as I hate online games, since I suck and never got involved. I'm sick of staring at tables of numbers for tonight.Ĭool, I'll get off my butt and merge later tonight or tomorrow.įirst it was Quake 1 for MS-DOS & OS/2 were my babies. I might add the other three XFn keys and the two OPT keys later. Reduced the number of loops there too, so that's nice. Fn-keys, all the alphanumeric, some symbols(+, -, ), basically everything needed to play the game properly. Pretty much everything of value is mapped. I just pushed an update to the key handling. Quake 2 for DOS huh? I didn't know that was you. Another platform I know next to nothing about hardware wise. I have a PC-98, I haven't been messing with it as much as I should, but I did finally buy a floppy drive, and a pack of diskettes, and I got DooM to install!. On the PC side, with the launch of Windows 95, it was pretty much over for the PC-98 as well. Sad to say but Intel cleaned Motorola's clock, and the 88000 & PowerPC just couldn't compete. But the cost of licensing & porting may have simply been too much. I suppose when you think about 1993, the year the 圆8030 came out, it was a new-ish machine for the timeframe of when DooM launched. I suppose the PC-98 got DOOM because the machine was so close to IBM PC's that porting it took almost no effort, and so even with very few sales it would still net a profit. if the X68000 had been sold in the west a version of DOOM would have been all but guaranteed. Quote from: kamiboy on September 09, 2016, 12:00:11 AMĭOOM was a big deal in the west, not Japan. msoft-float seems OK, although I guess since none of this is real it really doesn't matter. id1/pak0.pak : progs/invisibl.mdlįor some reason it barfs on a native compile with -m68881. Mus2 has been developed with the Qt framework and is available for Windows and Mac OS X.Added packfile. It is also possible to export the score to a variety of audio and graphics formats. Mus2 uses its own file formats for storing scores, tunings and accidentals, which can include metadata for easy indexing and cataloguing. When a notation symbol is placed on the score paper, its layout and position is automatically determined, usually with no need for manual adjustment by the user. The notation tools in the program are presented in a tool strip which only shows the relevant options for the selected tool. Mus2 has been noted for its simple user interface and ease of use. This also opens up the software to use as a microtonal instrument. Version 2.0 of the software adds MIDI recording capabilities with a simple sequencer and is able to map the keys of a MIDI instrument to any tuning in tandem with the built-in microtonal sampler. The program can work with uncommon time signatures such as 7/6 and create tuplets with ratios such as 10:7. Microtonal support isn't limited to symbols when a score using an alternative tuning system is played back, Mus2 performs the piece with correct intonation using acoustic and electronic instrument sound samples. Turkish music theorist and composer Ozan Yarman has used this capability of Mus2 to devise a notation system, Mandalatura, for a 79-tone kanun that he also designed himself. Additionally, the user can import music symbols from graphics files and fonts for use as accidentals with arbitrary cent values. The foremost feature of Mus2 is its ability to re-tune a staff to any tuning system using absolute frequencies, rationals and cents. Nihavent went through several iterations before being picked up by Data-Soft for distribution, and the application was released on Septemunder the Mus2 name. Turkish software developer Utku Uzmen independently began working on the microtonal notation application Nihavent in September 2009, and released the first beta version in May 2010. However, this software was never publicly released as it was not deemed ready for general use. Kemal Karaosmanoğlu for the notation of Turkish music pieces. Mus2 (from musiki, the Ottoman Turkish word for "music") was originally the name of a music application developed by M. ![]()
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