Can get a Sipeed Tang Nano 20K FPGA Development Board from AliExpress for $7.05. I don't know the first thing about working with FPGAs, but this seems like something worth learning someday.
FPGAs are great - it's like writing software to create hardware, magically and on demand.
I wish it were easier to get started with them - the toolchains are usually designed for professional engineers rather than beginners, and the debugging experience is poor vs. any typical software IDE like VSCode or IntelliJ (even though Vivado seems to be based on Eclipse or something.)
But don't let that discourage you - working with FPGAs is incredibly fun once you get over the initial learning curve, and there are many resources available on youtube etc.
pohl 1 days ago [-]
I knew before clicking it was the 80 column card.
CyMonk 1 days ago [-]
i had counted on the z80 card instead.
badc0ffee 1 days ago [-]
I thought it was going to be Woz's famous Disk II controller.
rjrjrjrj 1 days ago [-]
It is difficult to understate the importance of the Disk II controller. Cassettes were ridiculous. Floppy drives were awesome, especially two of them (which the controller supported).
Kind of the LaserWriter of its time: a very profitable peripheral that made the whole platform work.
musicale 1 days ago [-]
Forget "serious" - games were and are the killer app for personal computing devices.
How many people use Apple II emulators to run VisiCalc, after all?
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41237176
Edit: Tang Nano 20K, so fairly powerful, with 64Mbit of DRAM (enough to use as a virtual hard drive.)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mega_II
Can get a Sipeed Tang Nano 20K FPGA Development Board from AliExpress for $7.05. I don't know the first thing about working with FPGAs, but this seems like something worth learning someday.
https://6502.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=8270
I wish it were easier to get started with them - the toolchains are usually designed for professional engineers rather than beginners, and the debugging experience is poor vs. any typical software IDE like VSCode or IntelliJ (even though Vivado seems to be based on Eclipse or something.)
But don't let that discourage you - working with FPGAs is incredibly fun once you get over the initial learning curve, and there are many resources available on youtube etc.
Kind of the LaserWriter of its time: a very profitable peripheral that made the whole platform work.
How many people use Apple II emulators to run VisiCalc, after all?