Nintendo ds hack wifi




















But I have only seen a DS wifi dongle hack done in a magazene here in Japan. The way they did it was to take appart the top part of the DS. There is a board with the antenna etched into it. What they did was cut the leads and soldered a pigtail connector to it, drilled a hole into the side of the housing, and hotglued the connecter that it can be connected to from the outside.

Seriously, tell how you proform these cool hacks, either pubically, or privately. Much appericated ; -Crizpiz. I want to know how you can expand the picto chate on my DS. Can you please send me some step by step walkthrough for it via e-mail. You morons! Quit asking dumb dipshit questions! What Rounin posted should already be a clue to you morons that this is well beyond your leagues! I want penpal friends who like playing games and other sports activities. I love you all and also want you to sent me game to my mail as well.

Thank you and I love you all. Since the Nintendo DS has a built-in microphone and a wireless Internet connection, what's to stop it from being used as a WiFi phone, or the DSphone , if you will? I've scoured the 'net and found some projects currently underway that claim to do just that, albeit with limitations. This hack even adds extra value by transmitting what you write on the touch screen to the other person!

VCC requires hacked firmware or some type of passthrough device. DSpeak will reportedly allow in-game and out-of-game chat. And when you speak, an on-screen Mario or Wario avatar lip syncs along!

Unfortunately, the update has not been forthcoming. The initial version is still available and requires the firmware hack or passthrough. For this VoIP solution, you just meet the person you want to speak with in the same pre-game lobby and talk. It also works post-game, but not during. None of the above solutions include support for SIP or for dialing out. Have you made calls on the Nintendo DS?

I'd love to get your feedback in the comments section. Even though the update takes under 30 seconds, plug your NDS into the wall to play it safe so you don't lose power at a critical moment. Once you're done setting up up the flash cart—whether you had to update for menu 1. Run the "game" and you'll be greeted with the akAIO menu as seen below.

Now you're ready to set up your DS for game backups, so skip the SuperCard DSTwo setup below and jump straight to the instructions for setting up your Nintendo DS for game backups below.

You'll pay almost twice as much for the SuperCard DSTwo over the Acekard2i, but the increase in price also increases the ease of setup, and the bonus of some really cool in-game cheats and hardware emulation.

Extract the contents to the root of your micro SD card. It already comes updated for system menu 1. At this point, regardless of which cartridge you picked, you're now ready to play NDS backups. The problem is we don't have any backups yet, so we need to grab some of our game cartridges and create some. Before we can start backing up our games, however, we need to do a quick setup.

From this point forward the guide is flash cart agnostic. Unless explicitly noted all instructions apply to any flash cart. At this point you'll need your Nintendo DS or DS Lite, your wireless router, the game cartridges you want to back up, and a computer to back them up to. We'll be using a Windows 7 PC. First, configure your router. Unfortunately Nintendo never really got on the secure-wireless bandwagon when it came to the Nintendo DS line. If you're running your wireless access point wide open, you're all set.

If you're using encryption stronger than WEP you'll have to temporarily crank it down to old-school—and insecure —WEP security. You can change it back as soon as you're done backing up your games. Second, make sure your NDS can connect to the wireless router. If you have a Wi-Fi-enabled game start the game and use it to configure your wireless settings—the NDS and NDS Lite lack a system-menu option for configuring it without a game.

If you don't have a game with Wi-Fi play that would allow you to configure things, that's okay. You have a flash cart now that we can run some homebrew software on.

Load up your flash cart and browse to the DSOrganize folder. Launch the DSOrganize. Once loaded, go to Configuration, then click the start button to navigate across the tabs until you reach the last tab with the Wi-Fi symbol on it. Use one of the three available slots to set up your Wi-Fi information and save it.

Finally it's time to download and configure the backup tool. Download a copy of Backup Tool 0. BT comes with a copy of smallFTP, which is perfect for the task ahead.

Copy the NDS folder contents—but not the folder itself—over to the root directory of your micro SD card; extract the smallFTP folder over to your computer. You'll need to do some very brief configuration before we jump back to your DS. Replace the server IP with the local address of your computer on the Wi-Fi network.

You can check this by typing ipconfig at the Windows command prompt or by browsing to your router's administration page and checking there. The rest of the settings can stay the same, as they are pre-configured to work with the copy of smallFTP included with BT—change them if you had to set up your own server with different settings.

If you would like it to dump somewhere else, open up ftpd. Make sure the directory exists, otherwise the backup tool will error out.



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