• MudMan
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    534 days ago

    This was pretty fun to watch. But also kinda hearbreaking. That thing isn’t going to last forever. The longer this goes the less excited I am about someone figuring out how to make CRTs as a boutique thing for nerds, but it’s also a thing that should happen, even if I’m past my personal vinyl moment where I would overspend like crazy for it.

      • GHiLA
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        253 days ago

        …ish

        Like yeah, a CRT suddenly makes it so all of the fancy filters you have configured on retroarch are no longer necessary, and neither is frame advance for input latency if you’re using native hardware or a mistr.

        But is it worth it?

        …gonna be that guy and say no, for me.

        • @BigDaddySlim@lemmy.world
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          123 days ago

          If you want to prevent your TV from getting stolen just get a Trinitron, it’s heavy as fuck and old enough where no thief would take thier time to steal it. Mine’s 109lbs

          • MudMan
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            53 days ago

            I genuinely had to leave a Sony Wega behind when I last moved. It was my landlord’s and I would have bought it off of him, but it was just not possible to move it. It was there when I moved in, it stayed there when I moved out. You could make an olive orbit around that gravity well.

            • @kchr@lemmy.sdf.org
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              33 days ago

              Thank you for leading me down this rabbit hole of looking up Wega, which was a German manufacturer of hifi equipment bought by Sony. They apparently made tapedecks for the Sony Elcaset format, which became an even deeper rabbit hole… TIL!

                • MudMan
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                  13 days ago

                  Is THAT what happened to Aiwa? I had never made the connection.

                  I didn’t even know Wega was in reference to a company they bought. I always thought it referred to their flatscreen trinitons and nothing else.

                  That thing struggled to keep geometry, but come on, it was a humongous widescreen CRT with stereo speakers that could replicate the Tunguska crater. You gotta love it.

      • MudMan
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        113 days ago

        My understanding is there are no new tubes/screens being produced anywhere. The figure out part is the industrial production, not the technology. But hey, if there are any production lines still in operation I’d be very curious to learn about them.

        • @AllNewTypeFace@leminal.space
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          43 days ago

          The same was the case with nixie tubes, until a guy in Czechia started artisanally hand-making them for deep-pocketed connoisseurs. Eventually, someone will undoubtedly try doing that with CRTs, though the question is how expensive each one will be and will they be able to match the quality of, say, a mass-produced Trinitron.

          • MudMan
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            23 days ago

            Yeah, the problem is you can’t exactly learn to artisanally blow cathode ray tubes in your garage. Damn things are industrial by definition. You need someone to ramp up (or maintain, as someone above mentions) a big industrial facility to be able to reliably make an electron gun attached to an oversized vacuum tube that wants nothing more than to implode and throw shards of glass inside somebody’s eyeballs.

        • @Grimpen@lemmy.ca
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          53 days ago

          Just like floppy disks and VHS tapes. Every 3.5" floppy that will ever be made has already been made.

          • MudMan
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            23 days ago

            I thought there was like one place making them, but maybe they’re only packaging and shipping old ones?

            But yeah, man, it’s weird that we resurrected vinyl but those things are just lapsing despite retro tech fans having become a fairly large group. I suppose it’s easier to manufacture replacements out of new tech than it is to build the legacy stuff, so it’s all Goteks and memory card adaptors for a lot of that stuff.

            • @kchr@lemmy.sdf.org
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              3 days ago

              Maybe it’s the matter of vinyl consumers being a larger group than floppy disk consumers?

              I enjoy going to music concerts, and in the case of smaller scenes/bands i always buy a vinyl (and most of times a t-shirt) to support the band directly. I don’t even have a vinyl player at the moment - long story - but I have a collection of 300+ records.

              If I recall correctly it is also very cheap to produce in terms of tools and machines needed, the pipeline being all analogue and mechanical?

              I am also a retrocomputer nerd, but I guess the number of indie game developers that target floppy disks as the distribution medium for their next game are fewer by number compared to the musicians distributing on vinyl?

              • @Grimpen@lemmy.ca
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                12 days ago

                Floppy disks are still used in industrial automation. If something works, you don’t mess with it until you need to. The thing with floppies, is that there are lots of them floating around, and they last a long time. You can also write different information to them.

                I’ve got a couple of 8" floppies near my desk that aren’t used for anything anymore, but I bet they still work. So even though there are no floppies being produced, the existing supply of floppies will last a heck of a long time.

              • MudMan
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                13 days ago

                Yeah, that’s the thing. Pressing a piece of plastic with some sharp grooves in it is one thing, but once you get into TVs or magnetic storage things get hard pretty fast.

                And since most of that is digital anyway you can instead make a cheap adaptor to use a modern solid state device that will do the same job objectively better. There’s just no upside to it beyond nostalgia.

        • @Nilz@sopuli.xyz
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          13 days ago

          I remember seeing the news, the last consumer CRT production facility stopped producing around a decade ago, but I’m having trouble finding the article. They’re still being produced for commercial uses though (Boeing 747 cockpits use them for example).