It depends on what firmware your on. Go check your OFW and report backI currently use a firecard on my dslite LOL. Is there any cfw for any of the 3ds models?
Your asking in the wrong section. You want to be here: http://gbatemp.net/forums/3ds-flashcards-custom-firmwares.201/
The title of your thread is also misleading.
The DS has limited and basic firmware mods, it is called flashme.
You can refer to this: http://gbatemp.net/threads/what-is-flashme.34158/
If your hoping for something like the 3DS custom firmwares etc, your likely to be disapointed.
you can refer to the wiki as well for installation: http://wiki.gbatemp.net/wiki/FlashMe
I'm answering the question, not just for the OP, but for anyone who may come across this thread from a search or something.you should ask him what features he was expecting to be able to do before making it sound like a CWF on a ds/l is the second coming of jesus or something.
Whoa, nice. Custom firmware in general, is fun.Hehe, DS CFWs are fun!
Games which load from the card replace the firmware's GUI program in memory, but the SDK builtins, hardware drivers and system management code are still resident in firmware, and called upon by the running cart.Technically flashcards kind of are CFW, in that they they use their own firmware to run DS roms on your DS.
Be careful thinking along those lines as a lot of that was handled instead by the entirely separate read only/unalterable BIOSes. The firmware is more limited to some wifi settings, some calibration (touch, temperature) and user date (name, birthday, colour, whether you use the GBA on the top or bottom screen, alarm time...) and technically the wifi can be handled externally -- the DSOrganize homebrew had extra wifi settings stored on the flash cart. http://problemkaputt.de/gbatek.htm#dsfirmwarewificalibrationdata has more on firmware, for the BIOS then http://problemkaputt.de/gbatek.htm#biosfunctionsGames which load from the card replace the firmware's GUI program in memory, but the SDK builtins, hardware drivers and system management code are still resident in firmware, and called upon by the running cart.
Hehe, DS CFWs are fun!
Hey CTurt, I've got a question for you since you seem so knowledgeable on the subject. Got any tips on decoding the firmware once you dump it? I'm trying to change the startup sound as well as the color of the main menu gridlines (to match the custom shell i'm making).
so far i managed to get to get the .bin open in devkitpro, but it's completely illegible. Any idea how to get it back to something resembling a coding language so i can make changes? Do you need a decompiler? I can code, but this reverse engineering stuff's all new to me. I'm lost.