![]() ![]() Runningdroid on Siphoning Energy From Power Lines.Miles on Play N64 Games The Right Way With This Classic Controller Adapter.ryanberickson on Retrotechtacular: A Closer Look At The VT Proximity Fuze.Flux-Sucking Shunt on A Peek Inside A 747 Fuel Gauge.Sverre on What Do You Want In A Programming Assistant?.TacticalNinja on Hyundai Is Doomed: Porting The 1993 Classic To A Hyundai Head Unit.This Week In Security: Minecraft Fractureiser, MOVEit, And Triangulation 1 Comment Posted in handhelds hacks, News, Nintendo DS Hacks, Nintendo Game Boy Hacks, Nintendo Hacks Tagged dsi, handheld, homebrew, nintendo, Nintendo DS, nintendo dsi, portable, region free, region locked, videogame We’ve had success with the DSTT, which you can find on DealExtreme for just $10. If you’ve got a Nintendo DS, there’s no excuse not to be playing with homebrew. Maybe we’ll see hackers figure out how to take advantage of the SD slot instead. The blocking of homebrew maybe a side-effect of Nintendo’s announced region-locking on the DSi. Most carts load their firmware off the flash, so upgrades are easy. We hope this is something that can patched with a new firmware. While not completely exhaustive it’s proof enough to us that current generation carts will not work. Forum members have tested at least 10 different flash carts, and none of them worked. ![]() The members of have decided to tackle the most important question: will it run homebrew? Current DS systems just need a purpose built flash cartridge to load homebrew software (usually stored on MicroSD). It features larger dual touchscreens, dual cameras, and an SD card slot. The latest version of the Nintendo DS, the DSi, has officially launched in Japan. We’ll be picking up a DSi as soon as they’re in the US (they’re region locked).Ĭontinue reading “Nintendo DSi Gets Its First Flash Cart” → Posted in handhelds hacks, News, Nintendo DS Hacks, Nintendo Game Boy Hacks, Nintendo Hacks Tagged acekard, acekard 2i, ds, ds linux, dsi, flash, flash cart, handheld, homebrew, linux, nintendo, Nintendo DS, nintendo dsi, portable Nintendo DSi Teardown If you have a DS and aren’t using homebrew, you’re wasting it. It’s as easy as copying a file to a flash drive. There are a lot of great programs out there here’s a list of 24 apps that are dedicated to music creation. These carts may exist because of pirates, but we happily use them for homebrew. You can find a video of the Acekard 2i after the break. The features appear to be identical to previous versions and we expect other manufactures will be updating their product lines in short order. It’s the first DSi compatible flash cartridge. Here we are a month later and looking at the release of the Acekard 2i. If you’re looking for a more exotic way to crack into a DSi, perhaps this EM glitching attack might tickle your fancy?Ĭontinue reading “Breaking Into The Nintendo DSi Through The (Browser) Window” → Posted in Nintendo DS Hacks, Security Hacks Tagged exploit, nintendo dsi, opera, webkit Nintendo DSi TeardownĪ month ago, we reported that Nintendo’s new DSi portable didn’t work with any of the current crop of flash cartridges. If you want to give it a shot on your own DSi, all you need to do is point the system’s browser to. The actual payload is designed to execute a boot.nds file from the SD card, such as a homebrew launcher. In modern browsers a good way to allocate a chunk of memory and fill it would be a Float32Array, but since this is a 2008 browser, a smattering of RGBA canvases will do. For this he employed what’s known as a NOP sled basically a long list of commands that do nothing, which if jumped into, will slide into his exploit code. Now that he had an address to jump to, he just had to get his code into the right spot. This allowed him to identify the use-after-free bugs that he was looking for. First he used the WebKit layout tests to get the browser into weird edge cases, and then tracked down an Windows build of Opera 9.50 that he could run on his system under WINE. To put this plan into action, he put together two great ideas. reasoned an exploit in this browser would be an ideal entry point, as there’s no OS or kernel to get past - once you get execution, you control the system. When the Nintendo DSi was released in 2008, one of its notable features was a built-in version of the Opera 9.50 web browser. The Nintendo DSi was surpassed by newer and better handhelds many years ago, but that doesn’t stop people like from attempting to break into the old abandoned house through a rather unexpected place: the (browser) window. ![]()
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