@scaryred That's f*cking amazing lol
@Xiden, if you found info like it's old address/domain name I'd be interested in doing something like that in the future
Speaking of other Sega machines using the internet; There are sources for Linux kernels for the Motorola 68000 CPU. Which both the Mega Drive and Sega CD use. In theory it would be possible to create a Linux distro for Sega CD, and take advantage of the Mega Drive and 32X (I think, the 32x uses dual SH2 CPUs. So you'd really have to know what you're doing in order to be able to "SLI" with the MD/CD's M68Ks for added processing power). The Mega Drive has a keyboard and mouse which I was surprised to find out, and there's the Mega Modem and X-Band modem. If again someone really knew what they were doing, drivers could be coded to use all of those peripherals with the Linux kernel. You could then use 80s style internet browsing. In the 80s they had Telnet forums and websites, IRC was a thing too but you had to be an ulta-mega nerd, or attend a high level university in computer science in the 80s to actually know what it is and use it
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iccQZCxDd60If that was done you might, MIGHT, be able to run an xFree86 desktop enviroment session if resources were manages well and the session was run on one of the 4 CPUs between the MD/SCD/32X. The Dreamcast Linux disc out there (well the one i've tried) has xFree86 and you can use it with mouse
Point of elaborating on all of that is, if that existed in the future I'd expand also to have a Telnet BBS/IRC "website" specifically for the "Mega 32X CD" embedded Linux super computer (super computer in the sense that it's a quad CPU machine, even if it would only have ~1.5MB of RAM)
Woo the ladies with your Sega Mega Drive CD 32x quad CPU embedded Linux PC with karaoke addon browsing Telnet BBS or chatting on IRC in lightning 56k. Blast processing mother f*cker