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Post by patrickp on Dec 3, 2006 14:24:04 GMT -5
How about MD5 hashes, kinghanco? I can't say I've made any headcounts, but that would seem to me to be the more commonly used file integrity check.
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Post by Sune on Dec 4, 2006 8:14:11 GMT -5
Anybody remember the link to that russian site that had a Playstation BIOS .dat file for clrmame? That was useful. I admit I didn't check the FAQ here to see if it's already listed. CRC32 can be checked easily with common compression tools such as winzip or winrar. No need to download Hashcalc for that. By the way, welcome to the forum Killerbee
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Post by Deleted on Dec 4, 2006 8:46:39 GMT -5
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Post by Sune on Dec 6, 2006 20:46:59 GMT -5
Yes, that's the one.
Except now it gives a 404 again, like last time..
I have the .dat file if anybody is interested in verifying their BIOS files.
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Post by Ultima on Dec 6, 2006 21:39:57 GMT -5
The page seems to work just fine for me ;\
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Post by Melanogaster on Dec 6, 2006 21:44:39 GMT -5
So as for me...
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Post by kinghanco on Dec 7, 2006 1:56:13 GMT -5
How about MD5 hashes, kinghanco? I can't say I've made any headcounts, but that would seem to me to be the more commonly used file integrity check. You meant the sha1? Yea that too. Oh well. Can you send me the dat? I get an 404 on FireFox and IE7. Thanks.
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Post by Ultima on Dec 7, 2006 11:07:24 GMT -5
Eh I didn't realize Sune_S meant the PSX BIOS dat file page had a 404 -- I thought he meant the entire site itself was 404'd... In that case, it's definitely 404 on the BIOS dat page.
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Post by patrickp on Dec 7, 2006 13:52:34 GMT -5
No, MD5, kinghanco. It's the first format in the list in your picture. FWIW I use an app called MD5 for Win32, which adds a 'Hash File' item to a right-click menu. So I don't have to open an application to check a file.
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Post by kinghanco on Dec 18, 2006 1:41:10 GMT -5
I remove my top and last post.
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Post by Gamesoul Master on Dec 18, 2006 2:01:38 GMT -5
For future reference, please do not delete your posts, especially when they are well-established into a thread. It's bad practice and if nothing else, it causes confusion when there are replies but no longer a post to read what's being replied to.
Actually... would it be possible for one of the admins to disable that option? I really don't think there's any good point to a person being able to delete their posts. If someone *really* wants to delete a post, they can edit it and ask for it to be deleted by an admin.
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Post by kinghanco on Dec 18, 2006 3:06:45 GMT -5
For future reference, please do not delete your posts, especially when they are well-established into a thread. It's bad practice and if nothing else, it causes confusion when there are replies but no longer a post to read what's being replied to. Actually... would it be possible for one of the admins to disable that option? I really don't think there's any good point to a person being able to delete their posts. If someone *really* wants to delete a post, they can edit it and ask for it to be deleted by an admin. Sorry about that. I bad there. I should just remove the links instead of delete the posts. Yes it is a good idea to lock the delete button. Only the admins can delete posts for now on.
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Post by Ultima on Dec 18, 2006 12:04:53 GMT -5
There's no way to disable it. Oh well. Since this thread is *essentially* useless now, I'm going to archive it.
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