![]() ![]() I created a new directory with sdltrs, the level2.rom file and various disk files.this will create a sdltrs binary file, you just need to execute this, enter.Download the tarball from the Browse SVN under the Code menu.So here's a summary of what I did to get sdltrs running: Many thanks to Mark Grebe for his work on this. The benefit of using the sdl version is that it works around the problems associated with new linux distros. Keyboard input tends to be flakey on newer distros also.Īfter a little research I came across sdltrs which is based on xtrs.To allow -autodelay to work on xtrs I had to remove the optimizations from the compiler (-O0).Sound on xtrs would not work unless I stopped or removed the pulseaudio process.xtrs would not work on my new distro without removing the -DHAVE_SIGIO from the makefile.Unfortunately when trying this now it seems that Linux has evolved a fair bit and as a result I noticed a few issues when running xtrs. I've used Tim Manns excellent TRS-80 emulator xtrs before which I remember worked well. So I thought I'd show him the original, but rather than try and setup the old System 80 (TRS-80 clone from DSE) I decided to use an emulator. The Daily Telegraph reported that the Home Office had privately shared figures with No 10 suggesting more than 1.1 million foreign workers and students could arrive in Britain in 2024-25, just as the Tories face a general election test.I got a little nostalgic when my son started writing a game in Fenix that looked a lot like Robot Attack (Even though he's never seen it). The trip comes as migration tops the political agenda, with the home secretary, Suella Braverman, arguing in a speech at Monday’s National Conservatism conference that Britain “must not lose sight of the importance of controlling legal migration”, as well as preventing people from entering via unauthorised channels. One of the Strasbourg court’s rule 39 injunctions blocked the government’s first attempt to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda last year. Looming over the talks is the memory of Sunak caving in last month to demands from hard-right MPs to allow the UK to ignore rulings from the European court of human rights on small boat crossings.īackbench rebels had been pushing the prime minister to harden the illegal migration bill so ministers could ignore interim rulings. ![]() He is expected to tell her that reform is needed to create an international system that allows states to protect their borders and help people most in need. However, his most important meeting in Iceland could be his discussions with Síofra O’Leary, the ECHR’s president, over planned changes to how rule 39 works – an order that prevented the inaugural deportation flight taking asylum seekers to Rwanda last summer. Sunak’s renewed push for a Europe-wide approach comes after France previously rejected Britain’s calls for a bilateral returns agreement for migrants crossing the Channel, insisting that there was a need for a wider EU agreement. The international system for policing human trafficking is not working, Sunak will say in an address in Reykjavík at a meeting of the Council of Europe – a gathering of leaders from the EU, other European states and the ECHR.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |