Classic computing on modern hardware: an expandable eZ80 CPU card running bare-metal Lisp. The MakerLisp machine is a portable, modular computer system, designed to recapture the feel of classic computing, with modern hardware.
19.12.2018 · I fail to understand the confusion. Bare-metal LISP means its running LISP on the processor AS the operating system, not UNDER an operating system.
I'm currently in the process of designing a simple Z80-based computer. Same here, although I'm only at the point of trying to get things set up to program a X28C64 eeprom using my Arduino, so I can write the z80 object code to it and boot from that.
Share this:Classic computing on modern hardware: an expandable eZ80 CPU card running bare-metal Lisp. The MakerLisp machine is a portable, modular computer system, designed to recapture the feel of classic computing, with modern hardware. The machine centers on a 2” x 3.5” business card-sized CPU, which can be used stand-alone, or plugged.
If you'd like to contact the organizers, please send us email at balisp@.We meet quarterly to share lessons learned on various topics including computer science, design, HCI, complex s.
Bare Metal Lisp - RC Control using Ferret; arp. Setting Up Static ARP Table on Mac OS X; atmega. Bare Metal Lisp - RC Control using Ferret; avr-gcc. Ferret: An Experimental Clojure Compiler; aws. Parse S3 Logs with Goaccess; bash. Simple Bash Installer; Poor Man's Foxyproxy for Safari; Running Compojure as a Service; Static Galleria Script.
Classic computing on modern hardware: an expandable eZ80 CPU card running bare-metal Lisp. The MakerLisp machine is a portable, modular computer system, designed to recapture the feel of classic computing, with modern hardware. The machine centers on a 2” x 3.5” business.
Most recent news 2008-02-25 Frode V. Fjeld movitz.asd: Created an ASDF system definition. movitz/asm.lisp, movitz/asm-x86.lisp: Created new assembler and disassembler that's less overengineered the design goals of ia-x86 were not originally to serve as an assembler.
Ken Tilton
PilOS - A Stand-Alone Operating System Presenting a minimal prototype As an experimental version, the 64-bit version of PicoLisp is available which runs directly on a standard x86-64 PC hardware. In principle, it works as its own operating system. In the future, embedded applications are conceivable.