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2009-03-07

VM Madness

Filed under: General — 19day @ 00:05:54

So I found my copy of XP and installed a virtual machine of it on my vista box. Running XP in a virtual machine does have it’s disadvantages, at least using VirtualBox. For fun I decided to try to run the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy text adventure on it first, sort of like how I tried running it first on Vista to find (or rather, sadly, confirm) that DOS stuff was right out on 64bit platform. Unfortunately, under the XP VM, the whole thing died taking the VM manager with it, which is pretty crappy. A bug was logged with Sun a year ago and I guess it’s not a priority, as everything still seems to run under DosBox.

Can I just say thank bob for DosBox? If it weren’t for that, my parents new computer wouldn’t be usable as a backup for my mother if her work computer dies. Dosbox provides a valuable service that Microsoft seems unwilling to provide. Which is unfortunate, fine, but also kind of weird. I mean, who better than they to provide this, even if not baked into windows but as a side-along app like Dosbox? And I’ll quote something from The Old New Thing

Why 16-bit DOS and Windows are still with us

Many people are calling for the abandonment of 16-bit DOS and 16-bit Windows compatibility subsystems. And trust me, when it comes time to pull the plug, I’ll be fighting to be the one to throw the lever. (How’s that for a mixed metaphore.)
But that time is not yet here.
You see, folks over in the Setup and Deployment group have gone and visited companies around the world, learned how they use Windows in their businesses, and one thing keeps showing up, as it relates to these compatibility subsystems: Companies still rely on them. Heavily.
Every Company has its own collection of line-of-business (LOB) applications. These are programs that the company uses for its day-to-day business, programs the company simply cannot live without. …
The LOB application is the deal-breaker. If a Windows upgrade breaks a LOB application, it’s game over. No upgrade. No company is going to lose a program that is critical to their business.
And it happens that a lot of these LOB applications are 16-bit programs. Some are DOS. Some are 16-bit programs written in some ancient version of Visual Basic.

Perhaps with a big enough carrot, these companies could be convinced to undertake the effort (abd risk!) of porting (or in the case of lost source code and/or expertise, rewriting from scratch) their LOB applications.
But it’ll have to be a really big carrot.
Real example: Just this past weekend I was visiting a friend who lived in a very nice, professionally managed apartment complex. We had occasional to go to the office, and I caught a glimpse of their computer screen. The operating system was Windows XP. And the program they were running to do their apartment management? It was running in a DOS box.

Chen, R (2007). The Old New Thing:Practical development throughout the evolution of windows. Boston,MA: Pearson Education, Inc.

For simple consumers not interested in building their own computers (like my parents), seems that the carrot is actually more of a stick. See, if you just walk into a big box store like Futureshop trying to get a simple desktop computer, all you can get now is 64bit machine with 64bit vista. Dell is pretty much like this too (though the last I checked, you could still try to get 32bit Vista, but I don’t think it’s DOS support is all there, if at all). So really I guess it’s businesses that get to hang onto their stuff for a while longer, since businesses are the big important thing. My mother is her own business, and it needed WordPerfect 5.1. Oh well, apparently. So again, thankfully Dosbox picks up the pieces for us. At least so far, I’m still holding my breath until such time as she actually tries to use it fully to see if it all works.

But anyway, at least with this XP VM I can remote desktop to work, which pretty much covers all I needed, so I guess I can ditch this old crashy XP machine, except that it has all my stuff… grr. Oh, and I decided to install my Space Quest collection Alicia got me on the XP VM, set up the sound card, and try to play it. It actually works, and the sound as well (though that took a few tries). I’m amused that it installs it’s own copy of Dosbox though, hehe.

VMs
Click for larger image


So here is Space Quest 1 VGA running on the XP VM in the top left
Worms running in a previously installed Ubuntu install on the top right
VLC on the host playing an episode of Father Ted, for fun
CPU graph showing all is well on the host, Vista.

2009-03-02

I Am Become Gigabyte, Destroyer of Systems

Filed under: General — 19day @ 17:28:06

So for the second time, a computer under my influence has died. I did a couple of things to it before the big fade, I moved some music files from the boot partition to another partition to free up space. I ran Ccleaner to delete the IE mystery zone of internet files and cookies and such, but I didn’t have it touch the registry or anything sensitive. I downloaded overdisk to see what was using the most space, and I saw that a lot of it was in windows, in the spot where it downloads updates. It had downloaded 45 updates, but it wasn’t set to install them. I know of a number of worms around exploiting patched defects, so I had it install them. Oh, you need to reboot now? Okay. Ah yes, dual boot, 98 or XP, well, back into XP….

Windows could not start because the following file is missing or corrupt.
D:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\NTOSKRNL.EXE
Please reinstall a copy of the above file.

Ah crap. That’s not good. I rebooted and tried again (why not) and it happened again. I rebooted again and went into the primary boot partition that is running windows 98 (which is what originally came from the computer). I use explorer on 98 side to see that the file for the XP side is indeed there, but as for it being corrupted, I couldn’t tell that. Doing this took like half an hour, because accessing certain bits of the D: filesystem froze up 98 pretty good for around 10 minutes each. This was the first real clue as to what might be going on. The second was attempting to reboot into XP again in Safe Mode, and then Last Good Configuration Mode, and getting absolutely nothing… just a black screen and no disk activity whatsoever. The third clue, if it is one, was some odd behaviour when booting back into 98.

See, after rebooting back and forth a couple of times, 98 wouldn’t boot up normally anymore. I was infuriated at that point. It was doing it’s crap behind the 98 loading logo, and then beepidy beeped, and brought me back to text mode with Norton saying that it thinks it smells disk corruption and to press any key to scan, and then goes ahead and scans anyway. It immediately started with the D drive, which is where XP lives, rather than C drive, which is 98 side. It made it as far as scanning for a boot sector and basically froze up. I reset and then canceled the scan to make it all the way into 98, which is more or less stable for the moment.

I had also attempted to boot from XP Pro install disc we’ve got here and try to repair the installation. I had tried once and got into the Recovery Console, but it couldn’t read the D drive (after the fact, I suspect it remapped stuff around). I tried again but selected to install XP (I was looking for the magic auto fixer). I got as far as XP asking which partition I wanted to install on. It saw the C drive and its one partition, with 98 on it. It saw the D drive (physically) and it saw 3 partitions, as it should. Unfortunately, only the last one was given it’s volume label, the other two were labeled as Unknown Partition. This could only be very bad.

All research into the problem I was doing online was being done on my mother’s work computer, a seperate but equally fragile 98 install. The 98 side of the affected computer didn’t have net setup properly (we basically always used XP on that one). Certain malware can do stuff like what we saw, but given the 98 side freezeups trying to enumerate the file system, my brother and I decided it must be corruption on the disk itself. A disk that unfortunately was sliced into 3 partitions.

What to do was also a problem, no partition was big enough to act as a new XP host, we weren’t sure if the XP disc we had was valid (or if it was from my installation on my home computer, it tended to get passed around so XP could be repaired. I really hate the policy these days of not giving installation media but having “Recovery Partitions”… you can’t actually fix anything, you just destroy your data is all), and the computer itself is old, could we even buy a new internal IDE drive to install XP on?

So we decided, perhaps impulsively, to just go out and get a new computer, so we got an HP Pavillion, Quad Core, 4 GB RAM, Vista Home Premium computer 64bit. Apparently you can’t get a 32bit computer anymore, at least not from a big box store. I really wanted it to be 32bit (or running a 32bit OS) because I wanted fewer headaches for my parents to use the stuff they wanted to use. Anyway, stuck with 64bit machine, I’ve been attempting to set it up. Despite my parents not doing much with the ‘fun’ computer (as opposed to my mother’s ‘work’ computer), there are a couple of things that they wanted. Primarily, it needed to be a backup for the fragile work computer, meaning it has to run WordPerfect 5.1, which she has to use. The DOS one. The one from 1989. Vista 64bit has totally dropped support for DOS stuff… luckily Dosbox is there to pick up the peices and I got that working with WP so far. Getting a copy of WP off her machine was another trick entirely. Both the vista and work machines are tied into a router, but they couldn’t effectively see each other, a few internet searches warned about attempting this freezing 98, so I backed off and did some tricks with the internet to get the files to me.

Two other lost causes are the scanner and printer, both use parallel port for connection, and apparently that form of connectivity has been shunned. So getting this computer means new scanner and printer I guess. The 98 side of the broken computer can still use them I think, but I don’t want to attempt hooking crap up to the work machine for fear of breaking that too. Another potential loss is my father’s horse pedigree related program, he said he can just download it again as he bought a license to use it and all, but I was worried about it being compatible with vista. It is trapped on the broken computer right now so I can’t try it right now, but I’m currently lead to believe that it is 32bit, as is its installer, which is good news.

Trying to rescue stuff off the broken machine has proved to be a bit of a problem. I bought a spool of CD’s in the hopes of just using 98 side to burn whatever we wanted, however 98 can’t see the burner, maybe it never could, it worked fine in XP and that’s all we used, damnation. Internet doesn’t work either, despite all the settings basically being correct compared to the other 98 machine that connects fine, so I’m out of ideas there. The grand plan was to get an IDE enclosure to put the defective drive in, rescue as much as possible, and see if it really was corruption. However, brother didn’t bring his, and we couldn’t find one to buy here, so I guess that part of the plan has to wait for another day.

So really, I’m not sure if I caused the problem by installing the updates, hell, maybe we played with the windows XP boot logo, I can’t remember, I don’t think we did though. I know that will cause kerplosion when you install a service pack. Or maybe Ccleaner killed something, but I doubt it. I hope it’s the corruption thing, cause then it will just have been a coincidence. A horrifying, expensive coincidence. My parents and brother don’t understand why I get so worked up about computer problems, when I get into a level of anxiety usually reserved for spiders crawling on my face and me with my arachnophobia.

The trick is, I’m a packrat, in a physical sense to a degree, but much much more in a digital sense. My home computer’s 2 internal drives and 4 external drives (with an addition external I used for backup, and another one sitting at work) are a bit of an indicator. Now, take someone who is really a packrat in the traditional sense, and then set their house on fire… see how they react. These types of computer screwups are, to me, a digital fire.

2009-02-06

BSOD

Filed under: General — 19day @ 00:24:18

So my XP computer has been having issues, it was bluescreening and rebooting spontaneously in ways that made me feel like its days were numbered. So in somewhat of an impulsive move, I bought a computer off my brother. I had been toying with the idea of getting a new computer for a while, but I had held off due to wanting to avoid Vista. But the recent crisis tipped my hand and I took the plunge.

So what do I have, it is an HP m9450f, Intel Core2 Quad 2.50GHz, 8 GB RAM, Nvidia Geforce 9800 GT, and running, regrettably, Vista, and not just any Vista, but Vista x64. Well, with that amount of RAM, you probably knew that. More specifically, it’s Vista Home Premium, which has most but not quite all the features most people would want, and of course, Vista Business has them, but takes other stuff away, forcing people to go to Ultimate, sneaky.

Unfortunately, I’ve been hit by the double whammy of Vista and being 64bit, in that, basically nothing works. I’m sure if I was running 32 bit Vista I’d have some problems, but not others, but the 64bit causes all sorts of new fun. 16 bit stuff won’t work at all anymore. Well, I got Dosbox and was able to run The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy text game (as sort of a christening of dosbox) well enough, and who gives a crap about 16 bit windows programs, right? Well, it seems that a few things used 16 bit programs as part of their installers. So I wanted to install the ancient version of 3d studio I have to see it render fast and bring tears to my eyes, to find that the installer wouldn’t run because it was incompatible, which still brought tears to my eyes none-the-less. I can’t VPN into work either, not with the currently supplied Cisco software. Someone said they got something that worked with vista and gave me the link, I tried to run it, and it wouldn’t work. 64 bit be damned.

So I thought, Vista is a pain, but I bet I can use VirtualBox to install a copy of XP, so I install the software and hunt around for my XP disc, and can’t find it. Looking up the system information on my computer, it seems I had an OEM version after all, so I wouldn’t be able to install it anyway, at least not in Microsoft approved ways. Since I had VirtualBox installed anyway, I decided to install Ubuntu instead.

I’ll have to keep the XP box around for a while I guess, it has for the moment ceased it’s spasms so I guess I have more time with it. I bought a wireless router to hook both boxes up to the internet and, more importantly, so they could see each other so as to trade files. When I opened the router box, there was a tape across the wired ports imploring me to run the included CD first. I couldn’t imagine what kind of software would be on this CD, but I tried it anyway. And it provided detailed, step by step instructions on how to install the router. I decided to do all this on the Vista box so I could still use the old machine to look up help in case things failed.

It managed to fail very quickly. The autorun on the CD failed when start.exe couldn’t be run, but not to fear, Vista has applied compatibility settings to the file and I should try again. I quickly look at the router box again… Vista Certified… indeed. I run it, this time it launches the step by step guide to installing the router.

First, plug the ethernet cord that was in the computer into the uplink (or ‘yellow’) port. Done
Now, plug one end of the included ethernet cord into the port marked 1 and the other end into the computer. Done
Now, plug the power adapter into the router. Done
Now, plug the power adapter plug into an outlet. Shit, I did that at step 3, hopefully that’s okay.

Detecting network.. detecting router,… detecting internet. Can’t find internet *slap*. Yeah, I followed your steps, but you can’t find my internet? It offers to either end the installation without having internet, or to try looking for it again. Trying to Look Again just has it immediately tell me it still can’t find it, so I tell it to just finish up, figuring I’ll still have better luck than it will. I go and configure the router to shut down the wireless component, since I didn’t want to deal with that bit yet (Wii).

After going into Vista’s network manager screen, I delete some erroneous networks it created, and it goes and figures out the rest on its own and bam, internet. I plug in my XP computer to the second port, ipconfig release and renew, bam, both have new IP’s on the private network, and both can see the internet. Pity they can’t see each other. Vista can ping the other machine, but the funky graphical network map can’t see it. XP is even worse, it can’t see the Vista machine via the IP at all, not even to ping it.

So I install some hotfix on XP that makes Vista capable of seeing it, and that appears to be enough for it to see the shares I had left on the thing from my university days. I had to spend some time on the internet to figure out how to get Vista to let XP see stuff. I’ve also discovered that on Vista, selecting the Sharing option on a folder and using the basic “Share this folder” just doesn’t seem to work, I have to go into Advanced Sharing and get whammed by a UAC window in order to really share it. But at least at the end, it worked. That and I had to go into the pre-installed Norton Internet Security thingy and tell it to let the other computer in. I love the pre-installed junk that comes with computers. And bonus, since it belonged to my brother for a duration before I got it, it arrived telling me that my protection was expired. yay.

Anyway, I’ve only had this thing for a couple of days, but I think I’m going to end up still using the old one for a while yet, both the switch to Vista, and 64bit, just limits me a bit too much. I’m hoping Windows 7 will live up to the hype, and I may install it on this box when it comes out.

I installed Doom 3 though, High quality mode, pretty snappy.

P.S. This was written and posted from the Vista machine, IE crashed consistently when looking at the history, but that’s fine, I just needed IE long enough to get to the Firefox download site.

2009-01-05

Merry Winter Solstice

Filed under: General — 19day @ 22:33:40

Christmas occurred again, as it is wont to do. This entry is being written quite late as my heart just hasn’t been in blogging for a while. Work has been unpleasant in the extreme as of late, and one has the feeling that things will only degrade further.

In the middle of that was christmas. I went back to Caledon which is apparently my contractual obligation, for a week or so. It was mostly uneventful, but as it was supposed to be a quiet holiday anyway, that’s a good thing. Christmas itself was nice, gave out some good stuff, got some good stuff, everyone seemed pleased and we did our part to keep the economy afloat for another few milliseconds. One of the weirdest things we gave was a Nintendo DS to Father. Brother gave him the DS and I got him some of those brain-training games (an unobtainable PC brain-training game is what he had originally asked for.) My father generally does not like electronic gadgets, so I thought it weird that he’d react well to a little handheld computer as it essentially is, but he seemed to enjoy using it. My mother as well, she even went out to get more games for it (I convinced her to get Elite Beat Agents). Both of them were a bit stymied by the DS boot screen, which I have to admit isn’t the most discoverable thing in the world, but they are now both on their way to current generation handheld console goodness.

Cat Bed

It took time to get this shot, as she suddenly refused to use the bed

My cat got a gift of her own, a cat bed, which somehow she knew instantly was hers without fuss. And she sleeps on it where ever I put it. The only thing I can figure is that cats really like having a puffy edge to either use as a pillow, or just to contain the sleeping area.
I got some DVDs and games, one of which was Bully for the Wii which I took to with wild abandon and beat it in pretty short order, I found the game to be slightly cathartic in it’s subject matter. Alicia gave me a shiny pocket watch, which has a window in the face so you can see some of the clockwork, as she knows I like such things.

Pocket Watch

I need to wear a suit more often

The holiday passed mostly without incident, though we did lose power for a day after boxing day due to a wind storm. The house was absolutely freezing for the duration, and only got worse as night set in. It’s fun where we live since 90% of the time when the power goes out, it’s just our house, or just us and one or two of the neighbours, so no one is ever really is a rush to fix it. This time, however, service was restored faster than we expected given the circumstances, since lots of places, we heard once the power for the TV was restored, were out of power for days.

Eventually I made it back to the apartment, and then got in on a plan for New Years at Niagara Falls. We left on the eve in the afternoon in two cars, I was in the late one since we had to pick someone up. And due to our route, we actually made it to the hotel first. Our number was 10, and we stuffed ourselves in three rooms, each room with two Queen size beds. We started with a few drinks to get us in the mood, including a vibrant green mojito with a caloric count in the billions.

The hotel had a shuttle to take us to the casino, which one of our party estimated as being a 15 minute drive away. Apparently though, the main shuttle had broken down and they had a tiny one that was pretty much full when it came to pick the lot of us up. And only half of us could get on, the other half, including myself, went back inside of the hotel dejectedly. The hotel staff were only too happy to call us a cab and give us a series of detailed and possibly incorrect instructions on how to get the hotel at the casino to pay for it, since it was their shuttle service that had failed us. The test never came, as the cab didn’t arrive before the next shuttle did, half an hour later. This shuttle had enough room for us, but it stopped at another hotel where a bunch of polish guys got on. I didn’t know they were polish, I was just reassured by a friend that the swearing they were doing at each other was, indeed, polish. The shuttle trip took 45 minutes all told, due to the weather, traffic, and the circuitous route it took. In that time I think we witnessed the end of some polish friendships, and it started sounding like it would come to blows.

Our other half of party had arrived earlier and was standing in line at the casino buffet, so we joined them and in another half hour or so, we were seated. They couldn’t seat all of us at one table, so we split into a group of 6 and group of 4 and sat close enough that we could shout insults at each other, but not much else. Everything had taken so long that we were still there at midnight, so we finished up quickly and went out on the smoking balcony to see the countdown and fireworks. Unfortunately about 12 million other people had thought of that too, so it was pretty cramped. There was also no countdown, at least, none we could make out. A few people took it upon themselves to be highly intoxicated random number generators, but we figured it was actually midnight when the fireworks started. It was about 30 seconds after midnight when the fireworks stopped. The recession has hit everything.

Niagara Falls at New Years

Synthetic rainbow at the falls

We made a hasty exit and walked down to the falls, which was neat since virutally everyone else was leaving the area, so we had it, relatively speaking, to ourselves. We wondered up and down the area for a while and then started thinking about how to get back to the hotel. The shuttle service stopped at 12:30 and we were about an hour late for it at that point. So we spent an hour or so trying to hail a cab, which was pretty well impossible. We split up into teams trying to flag one down at different points of the street, and eventually one of them got one. It circled around again to pick up another of the drivers and went to the hotel so that people could take the cars we left behind and pick us all up. We eventually made it back to the hotel at 2ish, and started partaking in some celebratory liquids until 4ish. We groggily got up the next morning, barely escaped at the checkout time and had a few amusing attempts to find a Denny’s before giving up and going to an IHOP, where, yes, I did have pancakes.

2008, we hardly knew ye. 2009, you’d best behave.

2008-12-23

How to Eat Sushi

Filed under: General — 19day @ 13:47:20

This is quite old now, but hilarious, and it’s making the rounds again, so I thought, I’ll post it too. yay

Mah mah mah mah, oh toh toh toh

2008-12-08

I like things I remember

Filed under: General — 19day @ 22:55:16

I went for a little trip down memory lane, looking up the intro themes for some shows I used to watch as a kid, it’s chilling to see them again after so long, some of them only at the edge of my memory

The Green Forest, I had only enough recollection of the title to search for it. At first I wasn’t sure, but with the end of the song, it all came flooding back.

Rarely saw it, but the song always stuck in my mind. It wasn’t until that damn SNL sketch I saw years later that I remembered it at all

The Racoons, who cares about the intro, it was the ending theme that I loved. Come with us, I see passion in your eyes, run with us.

Ewoks theme, pure goodness. Except there was a second intro, but a retooled show which was just terrible. This was the good stuff.

Droids, honestly, a show I didn’t much care for, but I liked the intro (when I think for everyone else, it was the reverse.. whatever)

The Littlest Hobo, as a kid I never actually watched the show, but I loved the theme. So did you, admit it.

Care Bears (with other animals), there were different themes, but this is the show I remember. Is it a bad sign my favorite character was Noheart? Yeah, probably

Teddy Ruxpin, this show pissed me off, because it was a serial and I could only ever catch bits of it. Also, airships are cool.

Wonderful Wizard of Oz, bringing together Oz and anime in a serial I quite enjoyed, even though I was getting on in years.

You Can’t Do That On Television, I have the vaguest memories of this show, mostly involving slime.

Fred Penner’s Place, I always wanted to find a secluded grotto connected to the outside world only by a hollow log. Now I do, it’s called my apartment.

Mr Dressup, back with Casey and Finnegan, the only Mr. Dressup I ever knew. The newer stuff is non-cannon dammit

Polka Dot Door, where Polkaroo was constantly missed, the dolls remained dolls, and to the best of my knowledge, every day was imagination day.

Read All About It, saw this in elementary school, and it creeped me out.

Today’s Special, it’s about to appear… I really liked the security computer. Ah, foreshadowing.

Stop remembering TV and get back to work

2008-12-05

Friends with Detriments

Filed under: General — 19day @ 11:20:45

XKCD hit the nail on the head with this comic, the dawning realization of familiarity is both surprising and incredibly depressing.

Friends with Detriments

2008-12-04

You already know how this will end

Filed under: General — 19day @ 01:25:00

I’ve never played Gears of War, 1 or 2. I don’t even know the gameplay mechanics other than it being something akin to a first person shooter, and I’m not particularly interested in playing it. But I’ve seen ads on TV for Gears of War 2 and I found the animation and the music intriguing for some reason. Each commercial I saw seemed to actually be a 20 second or so slice from the main trailer I was able to find on youtube


Last Day trailer

Of course, course, the song alone is where most of my interest turned out to be, and the whole thing is, again, on youtube. Very nice.


DeVotchka – How It Ends

You already know how this will end.

2008-11-22

Three Dee

Filed under: Graphics — 19day @ 02:34:42

For some reason I was looking at some old renderings I had done. Some are okay, some are shite, but I’ve posted images before and thought, why not upload some of them to youtube and show them. And so I did, and so here they are.

This was from my eternally-on-hiatus game Asylum, this was the title screen which I had created some time before. My brother reads the first line from the poem that started it all, 191919. Moonlight bled off the store’s old copper roof and trickled down into the filthy street below.

This was the opening movie for the Asylum demo, where the ‘level’ consisted of mainly looking around the office room I had built for an ill-fated 191919 zine web interface.

One of the few movie-animated bits in the Asylum demo, a fridge door that opened and if you clicked it again, closed (the movie was combined into one for storage). Inside some Brio’s and a clockwork orange, why? why not.

The end animation of the demo, going down the drain. I spent forever on that bathroom and it still looks like crap.

A toy movie created for Asylum, when I was thinking of giving it a Phrenologic angle. Various screencaps of this animation indicated my mental state on my work MSN account for the first year of employment

This was a requested animation asset for someone’s editing demo project, they produced a commercial for Family Channel’s christmas lineup. I created this ending segway-logo thing. There was another bit to this that was just the f-circle logo getting snowed on, and then it would spin off the accumulated snow, and was meant as a watermark in the lower right corner during the commercial run. That animation appears to be lost to the ages.

Another request, this one for an animation for a school DVD. The hallway of lockers was supposed to be Matrix-like, which failed I think. Then it zoomed up on the marker-board where the menu options would appear, and then when chosen, fly through the back of the locker for lack of anything better to do.

This is an old demo video of Zygote. Camtasia capturing the video in Windows XP of the game running through Cygwin and being pretty crappy OpenGL code. So the sound breaks up pretty badly. Apologies to Katamari Damacy, and I left in the great production values at the end.

I have a few other video’s tucked away, but they can wait for another day

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