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yeah, with this i wanna see if I can manipulate BLOD to my advantage to see if I can make a harmless bluescale game maybe?
Like I said, the BLOD are the LCD itself failing. But the bluescale achieved by rapidly changing the contrast probably works on the fact that the monochrome black isn't actually black, but a dark purplish color. If you throw a little white (transparent) into it, then it would appear bluish.
Quote from: Qwerty.55 on October 13, 2010, 10:26:38 pmLike I said, the BLOD are the LCD itself failing. But the bluescale achieved by rapidly changing the contrast probably works on the fact that the monochrome black isn't actually black, but a dark purplish color. If you throw a little white (transparent) into it, then it would appear bluish.If this was true, then ordinary grayscale programs would also appear blue on this model of calculator. What I suspect is actually happening here is that the LCD driver has a bug where rapid contrast changes are somehow causing it to feed excessive voltages into the LCD just like the infamous "test mode" (though not as bad as that)
Quote from: ASHBAD_ALVIN on October 13, 2010, 06:09:48 pmLike this total bullshit:NO WAY THAT THIS ACTUALLY WORKS!!! The video was very well done though.EDIT: Hold on... did my respect up again?
Like this total bullshit:
Hehe, I've been playing that Halo game for years now on my 83+...