• Modern instant-on systems

    From Daniel@1:340/7 to All on Mon Apr 20 23:46:00 2020
    Before saying anything, I want to point out that there is no pretense
    of expertise in this subject. I'm just a curious bean. As the growth
    of retro computing matures, projects to resurrect the platforms by
    building vice boxes gets more common. The C64-mini, the zx spectrum,
    sega.. Otherwise, the 8-bit guy is taking off-the-shelf components to
    build himself a modern juiced up Vic20 to sell at some point beyond
    vaporware. They're creating the basic interpreter and kernal for their
    system. All's well and good. This brought me to an interesting thought
    with a similar notion. What stops anyone from doing the same thing
    with a modern cpu and memory/bus system? Is it the complexity of the
    modern cpu? In retro systems, the developer controlled memory
    allocation such. I'd assume the difficult part would be to micromanage
    every bit of memory management on a complex system. Am I on the right
    track?

    I only ask these questions just to get a better understanding of it
    all. My daily laptop is a TRS-80 M200 laptop and, unlike any other
    system in the house, it's instant-on. It's ready to dance a moment
    after depressing the power button.

    It would be utterly BOSS if a modern system could be created in the
    same tact. Could someone enlighten me?

    ... Visit me at: gopher://gcpp.world

    --- MultiMail/Linux v0.49
    * Origin: Digital Distortion: digdist.synchro.net (1:340/7)