09-06-2011, 02:48 PM
(09-06-2011, 01:26 PM)Ghjklbnm Wrote:(09-06-2011, 12:43 PM)Darth1701 Wrote:(09-06-2011, 12:18 PM)Ghjklbnm Wrote:(09-06-2011, 06:17 AM)serio Wrote: well, too bad. you can't play it, pirate.
Hey, sorry i don't have $100 to buy a imported game, and then an extra $130 to get a psp, douche.
And I thought that pirating games was the point of getting an emulator.
You thought wrong
Ah, appearently my friends aren't as reliable or smart as i thought them to be, or he's just an ass-hole who knows how to trick me into
something
So tell me the other uses of an emulator than playing downloaded games.
Please, this has been debated over and over again in several threads accross this forum...
Emulators are not developed for piracy. Otherwise, they would already be illegal in every known country.
JPCSP is an open-source PSP emulator that results from the work of several curious and skilled programmers and it's intended to showcase all the knowledge obtained through reverse engineering the PSP system.
Obviously, JPCSP can play games and if you use it to play games you DO NOT OWN, that is PER LAW considered illegal. However, that's your problem.
We do not support piracy in these forums, so we can't help you with that. Please refrain yourself from making piracy related comments, since it goes against JPCSP's proof of concept theory.
If you have an issue with the emualtor itself, that's a completely different story. Please don't mix the two things.
What you do with the emulator it's your own business and we certainly don't support people using it for piracy. We know it happens, since it's inevitable, but we don't support it.
To answer your problem with JPCSP, you need to install Java to be able to run it. Be sure to uninstall any previous versions of Java and install either the latest Java 6 build (recommended) or the new Java 7 (still under testing with JPCSP).