Hi all. I got Swiss up and running with an SD Geko and it works OK but the 4GB restriction is annoying. Sometimes my games will just hang too, not sure if that is a defective SD Geko or what, as I did have to wiggle it to get it to see my ISO's at all.
I see people using IDE drives with adapters to load games. Just wondering if that method offers anything other than drive space? It also seems strange that there doesn't appear to be a SATA solution or a simple USB flash drive adapter. While I was in Swiss I saw the ability to use SAMBA with the modem attachment. Is it possible to load games from a network share?
Just trying to decide what solution is best for me. Not really interested in drive replacements or fancy mod chips. I'm using a Xeno at the moment, I installed it primarily to play imports, but with some of the games selling for what they do... hence why I'm exploring ISO loading.
Any input is appreciated.
Cheers,
Chris
Swiss? Best way to store ISO's?
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Re: Swiss? Best way to store ISO's?
Get a decently large SD card, that's the nicest way to do it.
IDE-EXI is slower, and you can't load games from samba. SD gecko works quite well though and provides an upgrade path to a drive emulator in case you want to in the future.
IDE-EXI is slower, and you can't load games from samba. SD gecko works quite well though and provides an upgrade path to a drive emulator in case you want to in the future.
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Re: Swiss? Best way to store ISO's?
Thanks for the reply. I read that the size limit is 4GB on SD cards for Gamecube, is that not true?
Chris
Chris
Re: Swiss? Best way to store ISO's?
No. It's that some older software wasn't updated for larger cards.Chris230291 wrote:Thanks for the reply. I read that the size limit is 4GB on SD cards for Gamecube, is that not true?
Chris
In practice however, Gamecube lacks any native SD support. It only works when programmed in. (you might've noticed Nintendo's memory card manager can't read them)
Re: Swiss? Best way to store ISO's?
That limit would be 2GB since that is meant to be the cut-off size for standard SD vs. SDHC (which use slightly different protocols). There are a few non-SDHC 4GB cards but they're not common.
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Re: Swiss? Best way to store ISO's?
Awesome thanks. Big SD it is then I guess. Would really love loading from a netwroked NAS or something though.