If you’re wondering why something like this hasn’t been built before, you only have to look at the circuitry of the 6502 CPU. The first versions of this chip were built with an NMOS process ...
Now the Gigatron is emulating a 6502 processor, the same CPU found in the Apple II and almost every other retrocomputer that isn’t running a Z80. There’s a thread over on the Gigatron forums ...
Robert McMordie's A technical history of Acorn Computers is a concise and occasionally darkly funny hypertext concerning the ...
Since this processor is similar to the 6502 chip used in classic PCs and game consoles, like the Atari 2600 or the Apple II, the tiny computer can easily run emulators for those devices.
Merlin was a macroassembler developed by mathematics professor Glen Bredon, initially running on the Apple II family under DOS 3.3, for the 6502 processor. The product was published commercially ...
"He needed a disassembler for the 6502 chip," Geary said. A disassembler is a computer program that translates the chip's language into assembly language. A 6502 were for a new kind of computer ...