🕹 – The PS3 port of RetroArch uses .tsv for some playlist exports. Want to manually curate your ROM list? Open the TSV in Notepad++, edit tabs, keep your retro library clean.
Have you ever used TSVs on weird hardware? Or still rocking a CFW PS3? Drop your story below. 👇
Most people think TSV files are just for data nerds — spreadsheets, logs, database exports. But the PlayStation 3? That chunky 2006 beast with the Cell processor? Yep. tsv files ps3
🎛 – Modded PS3s often use FTP to transfer game assets. A TSV file can act as a quick lookup table: game ID → path → file hash. Human-readable, script-friendly.
Here’s a quick, interesting post about (Tab-Separated Values) with a fun PS3 angle — perfect for a tech blog, social media, or retro computing community. 🎮 Did you know your PS3 can work with TSV files? Here’s why that’s weirdly cool. 🕹 – The PS3 port of RetroArch uses
🧩 – Remember OtherOS? Running Yellow Dog Linux? TSV files were perfect for lightweight scripts — parsing logs, generating simple graphs with gnuplot, or feeding into Python without comma-quote headaches.
So why TSV over CSV on a PS3? ✔ No quoting hell — tabs rarely appear in game text. ✔ Easier to parse in limited memory (Cell SPEs loved simple formats). ✔ Works across PS3’s weird EOL conventions (LF vs CRLF). Have you ever used TSVs on weird hardware
Here’s the twist: is a lightweight cousin of CSV. No commas, just tabs. Simple. But on PS3, that simplicity unlocks some unexpected tricks: