Apparently they are getting 68040 levels of performance with a Pi... and
that interpreted. Going with JIT it's way higher.
-----Original Message-----
From: Gregg Levine [SMTP:gregg.drwho8@gmail.com]
Sent: Saturday, February 13, 2021 10:30 AM
To: Jason Stevens; The Eunuchs Hysterical Society
Subject: Re: [TUHS] 68k prototypes & microcode
An amazing idea.
-----
Gregg C Levine gregg.drwho8(a)gmail.com
"This signature fought the Time Wars, time and again."
On Fri, Feb 12, 2021 at 7:51 PM Jason Stevens
<jsteve(a)superglobalmegacorp.com> wrote:
You might find this interesting
https://twitter.com/i/status/1320767372853190659
<https://twitter.com/i/status/1320767372853190659>
It's a pi (arm) running Musashi a 68000 core, but using voltage
buffers
it's
plugged into the 68000 socket of an Amiga!
You can find more info on their github:
https://github.com/captain-amygdala/pistorm
<https://github.com/captain-amygdala/pistorm>
Maybe we are at the point where numerous cheap CPU's can eliminate
FPGA's?
-----Original Message-----
From: Michael Parson [SMTP:mparson@bl.org]
Sent: Friday, February 05, 2021 10:43 PM
To: The Eunuchs Hysterical Society
Subject: Re: [TUHS] 68k prototypes & microcode
On 2021-02-04 16:47, Henry Bent wrote:
> On Thu, Feb 4, 2021, 17:40 Adam Thornton
<athornton(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
>
>> I'm probably Stockholm Syndrommed about 6502. It's
what
I grew
up on,
>> and
>> I still like it a great deal. Admittedly
register-starved (well,
> unless
> you consider the zero page a whole page of registers),
but...simple,
>> easy
>> to fit in your head, kinda wonderful.
>>
>> I'd love a 64-bit 6502-alike (but I'd probably give it
more than
three
>> registers). I mean given how little silicon (or how
few FPGA
gates) a
>> reasonable version of that would take, might as well
include
65C02 and
>> 65816 cores in there too with some sort of
mode-switching
instruction.
>> Wouldn't a 6502ish with 64-bit wordsize and a 64-bit
address
bus
be
>> fun?
>> Throw in an onboard MMU and FPU too, I suppose, and
then you
could
>> have a
>> real system on it.
>>
>>
> Sounds like a perfect project for an FPGA. If there's
already a
6502
> implementation out there, converting to 64 bit should be
fairly
easy.
There are FPGA implementations of the 6502 out there. If
you've not
seen
it, check out the MiSTer[0] project, FPGA implementations
of a LOT
of
computers, going back as far as the EDSAC, PDP-1, a LOT of
8, 16,
and 32
bit systems from the 70s and 80s along with gaming
consoles from the
70s
and 80s.
Keeping this semi-TUHS related, one guy[1] has even
implemented a
Sparc 32m[2] (I think maybe an SS10), which
boots SunOS 4,
5, Linux,
NetBSD, and even the Sparc version of
NeXTSTEP, but it's
not part of