Hi.
Thanks for the update. The speed comparison is interesting.
With respect to screen flickering, please open an issue on the Github
repo. I don't really see that under Linux.
Thanks,
Arnold
Sergio Pedraja <spedraja(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Hi everyone. I've built Freebee using Make and
specifying win32 as
architecture under Cygwin with libSDL2 plus Cygwin-X XWindows installed.
The Freebee runs starting it from xterm. It's a bit faster than my own
real 3B1. I have briefly tested the two startup hard drives and the second
hard drive, empty. No problem as far as I have seen. Great work. On the
other hand I dare to suggest the improve of the GUI of the emulator to
reduce the flickering of the 3B1's screen refresh. Is too much visible.
Thanks and good luck, anyway.
Sergio
El vie., 29 ene. 2021 11:50, Arnold Robbins <arnold(a)skeeve.com> escribió:
> Hello All.
>
> Many of you may remember the AT&T UNIX PC and 3B1. These systems
> were built by Convergent Technologies and sold by AT&T. They had an
> MC 68010 processor, up to 4 Meg Ram and up to 67 Meg disk. The OS
> was System V Release 2 vintage. There was a built-in 1200 baud modem,
> and a primitive windowing system with mouse.
>
> I had a 3B1 as my first personal system and spent many happy hours writing
> code and documentation on it.
>
> There is an emulator for it that recently became pretty stable. The
> original
> software floppy images are available as well. You can bring up a fairly
> functional system without much difficulty.
>
> The emulator is at
https://github.com/philpem/freebee. You can install up
> to two 175 Meg hard drives - a lot of space for the time.
>
> The emulator's README.md there has links to lots of other interesting
> 3B1 bits, both installable software and Linux tools for exporting the
> file system from disk image so it can be mounted under Linux and
> importing it back. Included is an updated 'sysv' Linux kernel module
> that can handle the byte-swapped file system.
>
> I have made a pre-installed disk image available with a fair amount
> of software, see
https://www.skeeve.com/3b1/.
>
> The emulator runs great under Linux; not so sure about MacOS or Windows.
> :-)
>
> So, anyone wishing to journey back to 1987, have fun!
>
> Arnold
>