Of course it's real! It's actually a very simple hack.
For the people who commented about sound: You clearly don't know anything about sound, soundwaves and how you store and play them back. I'll be nice and give you a crash course.
Sound travels in waves. The height of the wave is how loud it is, and the distance between the waves how high frequency it is. You store sound by taking the height of the wave every once in a while, and play it back by sending it to the speaker. Now, if the DS is overclocked, what will happen?
Sound will be sent to the speaker more often that it was intended to be. This obviously results in shorter wavelenghts, and higher pitch. Simple, really.
"Turbo" button makes a return with DS Lite on steroids
Jul 20th 2006 4:57PM (Joystiq)Of course it's real! It's actually a very simple hack.
For the people who commented about sound:
You clearly don't know anything about sound, soundwaves and how you store and play them back. I'll be nice and give you a crash course.
Sound travels in waves. The height of the wave is how loud it is, and the distance between the waves how high frequency it is. You store sound by taking the height of the wave every once in a while, and play it back by sending it to the speaker. Now, if the DS is overclocked, what will happen?
Sound will be sent to the speaker more often that it was intended to be. This obviously results in shorter wavelenghts, and higher pitch. Simple, really.
DIY camera for the Nintendo DS
Jul 12th 2006 10:08AM (Engadget)