Welcome to VoCore

VoCore is open hardware and runs Linux(OpenWrt). It has 128MB DDR, WIFI, USB, UART, SDXC, I2C, SPI, 20+ GPIOs but only one inch square(25.8mm). It will help you to make a smart house, study embedded system or even make the tiniest router in the world.

You will not only get the VoCore but also its hardware design including schematic, circuit board, bill of materials and source code of all applications. You are able to control EVERY BIT of your VoCore.

We invite you join us, help our community improve this open source hardware and use your creative skills to make a more wonderful Internet of Things!

wii+roms+wbfs+europe+top

wii+roms+wbfs+europe+top

Why VoCore

Tiny Size: One square inch, easy to embed to devices.

OpenWrt: Easy to code; super stable, three years no reboot.

Low Cost: low cost, less than 1watt, unmatched performance.

Interfaces: Hardware support USB, Ethernet, SD, I2C, SPI etc.

OpenSource: Both software and hardware, totally FREE

Long Life: Keep production over 10 years, fast email support.


Wii+roms+wbfs+europe+top — __link__

often centers on finding reliable ways to back up and play these classics using the

He dragged the folder to the WBFS drive. Using a program called Wii Backup Manager, he watched the green progress bar crawl. One by one, the ghosts materialized. wii+roms+wbfs+europe+top

: WBFS files strip away "junk data" (dummy data used to fill up physical discs), significantly reducing file sizes. For example, Super Paper Mario can shrink from 4.4GB to roughly 500MB when converted to WBFS. often centers on finding reliable ways to back

But there was one file at the bottom. A ROM file. Not a WBFS. A .wii.rom . Labeled: EUR_UNRELEASED_ZELDA_PROTO.gcm . : WBFS files strip away "junk data" (dummy

The Dolphin emulator natively supports the WBFS format, allowing you to play these games on a PC.

He plugged the drive into the Wii. He launched the Homebrew Channel. He selected "USB Loader GX."

He knew the legend. In the early 2000s, European modders had cracked the Wii wide open. Because Nintendo of Europe was slow to release games, a digital underground had formed. They'd rip their own discs—their legal, purchased discs —into a special format called WBFS. Then they'd copy them to a USB drive. The console, tricked by a software exploit called the Homebrew Channel, would read the drive as if it were the disc slot.

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