[Coco] DriveWire is just a hobby (Was: DW4 on MAc & Linux)
Al Hartman
alhartman6 at optonline.net
Fri Sep 27 18:00:35 EDT 2013
I'm sure I've read that people have reproduced the Coco and the Coco 3 using
discrete TTL. The Coco3FPGA project shows it's doable that way.
Since Dragon, and many others licensed their ROMs from Microsoft, that would
be doable.
If the machine just had a boot ROM to boot NitrOS9, or empty sockets to
transplant ROMS from a Coco, then the licensing thing would be moot.
The Outbound Laptop for the Mac used ROMS from a Mac Plus.
-[ Al ]-
-----Original Message-----
From: Christopher Smith
If it's just newer hardware we wanted, an enhanced CoCo 2 should be quite
doable. The SAM chip was reasonably primitive by modern standards and
should be reasonably well-documented, I'd guess. Probably all of that could
be shoved in a low cost FPGA and you could use another array (... or put
them on a single larger array) for the CPU. You could even do a real 6809
or 6309 if you aren't worried about the parts not being manufactured any
more. In theory this should allow speeds in the tens-of-mhz range and you
could work out a way to support a good deal of memory even above what is on
the CoCo 3, though if that was all you'd done, the graphics wouldn't be so
great. :)
... and of course there's the problem of having the time, money and
inclination to do it, but technically speaking I think the big deal would be
in terms of the legality of the ROM from the system. If you want a
compatible machine, you need a compatible ROM which you're allowed to
reproduce and perhaps modify slightly for new hardware.
Chris
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