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Supercharge Your Homebrew-Hacked Nintendo DSYou’ve hacked your Nintendo DS for easy backups and single-cartridge playback. Now it’s time to install some awesome homebrew software, capable of playing back music and video, organizing to-dos, playing emulated and homebrew games, and a lot more.

Photo a composite of images by Lecate and daveynin.

Why put homebrew on the Nintendo DS? It’s portable, has dual screens including a touch screen, and it’s as powerful as any previous-generation smartphone or PDA. If you already have a DS, homebrewing is a great way to get more out of your device than just fun and portable game play.

What do you need to dabble in DS homebrew? If you followed our guide to easy Nintendo DS backups, you’ve already got everything you need for Nintendo DS homebrew: a DS unit, a flash cart, a microSD card, and a card reader. If you don’t have those things, make sure to check out our previous guide and refer to the “Why Back Up and What You’ll Need” section. Even if you’re not interested in backing up your games and just want to run homebrew, read over the first half of the backup guide and you’ll be up to speed on how flash carts work and which one you should consider buying.

A small note before we continue further. The point of this guide is to highlight great homebrew applications that can make your Nintendo DS do more than simply play games. The point of DS homebrew is to expand the utility of your Nintendo DS, not to replace other bigger, more expensive, and more capable devices.

Installing Homebrew Applications

Installing homebrew applications is easy-peasy. Unless the readme file or the web site for the homebrew app in question provides specific instructions on how folders should be organized and arranged, you can just dump the homebrew app anywhere on your SD card. As long as all the files that came in the package you downloaded stay together in the /whatever-homebrew-app/ folder, you shouldn’t have any issues. Make sure to read the readme.txt, if included, to double check!

Homebrew Applications

It may have been designed as a tiny and single-purpose device, but the Nintendo DS has a surprisingly diverse homebrew community. DS homebrewers love pushing the limits of the device and coming up with new ways to squeeze a little extra life out of it. Though you may need to do some heavy searching in Google, you can find NDS applications for nearly any task you can think of—though many of the homebrew apps are highly experimental. We've collected the following homebrew applications to showcase their utility, novelty, or both.

Supercharge Your Homebrew-Hacked Nintendo DS
Colors!: One of the most polished homebrew applications for the DS is Colors!, a homebrew application that has been ported to nearly every portable device around. The video above is a demonstration of the sketchbook capabilities of Colors! Not only can you create images in Colors!, but you can replay the entire process as a video. If you’re only going to play around with one homebrew application on the DS, this is a great one to show off how great homebrew can be.

Supercharge Your Homebrew-Hacked Nintendo DS
MoonShell: MoonShell is a fantastic multimedia player for the DS. It supports MP3, WMA, OGG, MIDI, and low-bit rate AAC among other audio formats, JPG, BMP, PNG, and GIF image files, and video files. Unfortunately you can’t just plop your AVI files on a microSD card and be done with it. You’ll need to convert any movie files you want to watch on your DS into the native DPG format it supports. MoonShell includes a basic converter, DPGenc, or you can download third-party tools like BatchDPG. Since the official MoonShell page is in Japanese, you’ll probably want to read up on it at Wikipedia and DS-Extra.

Supercharge Your Homebrew-Hacked Nintendo DS
DSOrganize: DSOrganize is an ambitious DS-based organizer and collection of tools. It has a web browser, file browser, address book, to-do list, notepad, calculator, a database of homebrew applications—a perpetual work in progress—and an image/audio player that supports popular formats like JPG, PNG, MP3, WAV, and more. If Colors! is the most polished homebrew application out there, DSOrganize is by far the most feature packed.

Supercharge Your Homebrew-Hacked Nintendo DSInstant Messaging and Social Networking: You’ll find no shortage of homebrew tools for connecting to social networks and sending instant messages. The following list will take you to the instruction manuals for the applications courtesy of the homebrew site DS-Extra, when available.

  • DSTwitter – If tiny Twitter updates aren’t a perfect match for the little DS, what is?
  • Fb4nds – Simple Facebook browsing and updates on the DS.
  • Beup Live – Access MSN Messenger on your DS.
  • CIIRC – Old school IRC chat on your DS.
  • JabberDS – Chat using Jabber-based server, like Gchat.

Supercharge Your Homebrew-Hacked Nintendo DSDS Weather Report: DS Weather Report is a little weather reporting application for the DS that downloads weather data via Wi-Fi. It supports over 40,000 locations worldwide and gives a current detailed report—including sunrise and sunset times—and an overview of the next five days.

DSWiki: What homebrew community worth its salt would skip over porting the entire Wikipedia library to their device? DSWiki requires a microSD card with 4GB free to store the copy of Wikipedia, but once you’ve got it on there you can search, bookmark, and browse links and sub-pages just like you can from your computer.

Supercharge Your Homebrew-Hacked Nintendo DS
Remote Touch: Remote Touch allows you to control your PC from your NDS. As the video above demonstrates it isn’t a remote VNC tool, it’s more like the popular phone-as-touchpad applications for iOS and Android phones. You can control your interface, media players, and even games.

AirScan: AirScan is small homebrew app that turns your NDS into a Wi-Fi sniffer. Don’t expect a pretty GUI like many phone-based sniffers have, but do expect lots of great information, like what type of security the access point has, latency, and other useful tidbits.

Emulators

Supercharge Your Homebrew-Hacked Nintendo DS
Building emulators for the Nintendo DS, already a gaming system with a comfy directional pad and buttons built in, was a no brainer. You can find emulation apps for most older consoles and even some novel—but not very practical—emulators for old computer systems like the MacOS.

Although we're sure you'll have fun with all the emulators available, we sorted the following list in order of how smoothly the emulators loaded on our test system—in fairness, however, they all worked remarkably well. As with any kind of emulation, you should expect odd quirks from time to time, like strange-sounding background music or sprites that layer or fill in oddly.

  • NesDS: If you’re craving some old-school Mario Brothers action, NesDS turns your Nintendo DS into a 1980s-era NES.
  • Lameboy: Why limit yourself to the stable of current generation portable Nintendo games? Lameboy emulates the Gameboy and Gameboy Color on your NDS so you can finally catch all those Pokemon.
  • SNEmulDS: SNES emulation on the NDS isn’t perfect but it’s pretty darn good. Expect occasional issues like weird music playback and background textures that don’t fill in all the way.
  • jEnesisDS: Playing Sega Genesis games on your Nintendo portable? It might have been sacrilege back in the day, but now it’s downright awesome.
  • NeoDS: No way you could have ever afforded a Neo Geo system in its prime? Now’s your chance to take it for a spin.

Homebrew Games

Supercharge Your Homebrew-Hacked Nintendo DS
If you’d prefer to skip over the legal murkiness of playing emulated games on your Nintendo DS, you’ll find no shortage of great homebrew games. The NDS homebrew gaming community is actually more bustling than the application community, a natural extension of the NDS’s primary function as a gaming platform. We hardly have the room to highlight all the great homebrew games out there, but we’ve rounded up a few of our favorites to share with you.

  • Quake2DS: A well done port—seen in the screenshot above—of Quake II. Note: The Quake II port requires an inexpensive memory card in the slot-2 of the DS or DS Lite. See the Quake2DS web site for details.
  • MegaETK-TD: Fun Mega Man clone for the DS.
  • 15th Floor: A mystery game in the vein of Myst and Hotel Dusk. Compelling gameplay, hard to believe it’s homebrew.
  • Jelly Blocks: Remake of popular flash games like Bejewled and other touch-the-colors type games.
  • Super Smash Bros Rumble: A homebrew version of the popular Super Smash Bros franchise. Plays like an SNES version of Super Smash Bros.
  • DS DOOM: Can any homebrew-enabled platform be considered serious without a port of DOOM? Relive the classic on the DS.

For more homebrew gaming fun, check out the homebrew games directory at Filetrip.net and DS-Extra.


There are so many great homebrew applications and games for the NDS we’ve likely overlooked quite a few gems. Sound off in the comments with your favorite homebrew applications and help your fellow readers get more out of their Nintendo DS units.

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old-search.jpgIf you’re not happy with the new Google Image search and would prefer to stick with the old search as your default, reader The_Doc offers this simple URL tweak.

The new Google Image search has a Switch to basic version link at the bottom of the page, but it doesn’t stick, so if you prefer the old view, you’ll have to scroll all the way down there every time. The_Doc offers the solution:

If you don’t like the new Google Image Search design, add:

&sout=1

to the URL to use the the “basic” (i.e. old) version. Update your bookmarked keyword searches accordingly.

So, for example:

http://images.google.com/images?q=puppy

…would become:

http://images.google.com/images?q=puppy&sout=1

[via #tips]
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For all those interested in outer space (come on, who isn’t at least a tad bit curious?), we want to let you know about an exciting project just getting underway. As part of Google’s ongoing relationship with NASA, Googler Tiffany Montague is on her way to the high arctic to participate as a crew member in some remote NASA field tests.

Haughton Crater, located in the Canadian arctic, is an extreme environment that simulates Martian conditions – otherwise known as a planetary analog. Tiffany just happens to have both extreme expedition and near-space suit experience, so she’ll be spending a week at a remote research station operated by the Mars Institute and sponsored by SETI and NASA.

Among the cool things she’ll be doing while in the field are landscape documentation, prototype space suit testing, simulating pressurized rover traverse missions, surveying new aircraft landing sites, and characterizing the geology of the Moon, Mars and NEO-like terrain. Many of these activities are even being planned using Google Earth!

Tiffany will be blogging about her adventures as Internet connectivity in the station permits. Check out her first post and follow her blog, Voices from Space, to keep up to date, and we’ll also ask her to share a full report complete with favorite stories and photos when she returns.

Posted by Deanna Yick, Lat Long Blog Team

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Linux only: Free utility Ear Candy makes your sound system smarter. If you’re listening to music and a Skype call comes in, or you load a YouTube video, Ear Candy gently lowers your music volume to let the other sounds through.

Ear Candy does this for a few different sound “events,” including sound files, movies, and VoIP calls. It’s basically a volume manager for PulseAudio, the new (but not necessarily loved) audio system for many Linux distributions. Ear Candy has a few other tricks up its sleeve, too, like automatically switching your mic input and audio output to USB headsets when they’re plugged in (which is, unfortunately, not something most Linux desktops do perfectly well on their own). It’s certainly not bug-free, but I found it pretty cool to watch my Big Star soundtrack automatically phase down when I clicked on an emailed YouTube link.

Ear Candy is a free download for Linux systems only. Ubuntu users can add a PPA for updated installations, while other Linux systems can install from source.

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Use Dropbox to Easily Install Non-Market Android AppsAndroid phones allow users to grab apps outside the official Market, but it usually involves either USB transfer or some tricking browser navigation. Lifehacker reader cinnamonster points out the smarter solution—use the Dropbox file syncing app to grab installers.

Grab the app you want from a full-fledged browser on your desktop, then drop it in Dropbox on your system. I created an Android Apps folder for the purpose, but it’s not necessary. Then open up the Dropbox app on your Android phone, navigate to that .apk file you downloaded, and click it there. Your phone will open up its installer, and you’ll be all set to go. You’ll also need to have non-Market sources enabled in your Applications settings.

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