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105 bytes added ,  19:38, 5 February 2023
Undo revision 117921 by Hallowizer (talk) this isn't a "warez reference"
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Like the [[NDEV]], it has an increase in memory compared to the retail Wii. It contains a USB Mini-B port on the front of the unit to allow for developers to send games to the unit itself. There are four disc number buttons, labelled 1, 2, 4, and 8. These buttons allow the user to find the sector of the hard drive that they can find their game on. There is also a disc change and insert button, which mimics inserting a disc into an optical drive. On the system menu, there is a disc check channel, which is a very simple tool that is intended to test the integrity of game data.  
 
Like the [[NDEV]], it has an increase in memory compared to the retail Wii. It contains a USB Mini-B port on the front of the unit to allow for developers to send games to the unit itself. There are four disc number buttons, labelled 1, 2, 4, and 8. These buttons allow the user to find the sector of the hard drive that they can find their game on. There is also a disc change and insert button, which mimics inserting a disc into an optical drive. On the system menu, there is a disc check channel, which is a very simple tool that is intended to test the integrity of game data.  
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The RVT-H's internal hard drive is not encrypted. This allows a tool such as [https://github.com/GerbilSoft/rvthtool rvthtool] to operate on an RVT-H system that's connected directly using USB, as well as disk image dumps from both the USB interface and from a direct HDD dump. Disc images however, could potentially be encrypted. Any GameCube game stored on an RVT-H unit is not encrypted, whereas any Wii game found on a unit may be encrypted with an RVT-H debug key.
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The RVT-H's internal hard drive is not encrypted. This allows a tool such as [https://github.com/GerbilSoft/rvthtool rvthtool] to operate on an RVT-H system that's connected directly using USB, as well as disk image dumps from both the USB interface and from a direct HDD dump. Disc images however, could potentially be encrypted. Any GameCube game stored on an RVT-H unit is not encrypted, whereas any Wii game found on a unit may be encrypted with an RVT-H debug key. These encrypted files may be re-encrypted and fakesigned to be used on retail consoles via a USB loader.
    
{{Navbox Wii Models}}
 
{{Navbox Wii Models}}
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