YouTube blogger Taki Udon has managed to hack the GHLBD engineering calculator and turn it into a game console. The portal drew attention to this. Hi-Tech Mail.Ru.
The main feature of the calculator is a touchscreen, a motherboard with a 32-bit Allwinner A50 quad-core chip and 1 GB of RAM. It also runs on the Android 9 operating system and costs around $10.
The engineer was able to redesign the calculator to emulate the old PSP and Nintendo 64 consoles and was able to run games like RoboCop, Pokemon, Dragon Ball, Metroid, and others. All of them work smoothly and “without brakes”, but they can only be controlled using the touchscreen or Bluetooth game controller – after flashing the physical buttons of the calculator stopped working.
Formerly socialbites.ca we talked about itHow an American assembles a gaming PC every few months from components found in landfills. The only components he had to buy were a power supply and RAM.