Ah very cool... should make the bridging easy...
The zipit is/was, I believe, 300MHz or so out of the box... but only 32MB of RAM if i
recall. It was a bit slow perhaps, but certainly felt more like lower-end "real"
hardware as compared to simh on a newer machine (which can obviously turn blazingly-fast
"VAX" i/o in the right configuration).
I'd seen talk (perhaps by Sampsa in this group), of an fpga turned PDP, that sounded
very interesting as well... I don't suppose anyone has seen this come about?
On Wed, May 2, 2012 at 10:01 AM, <Paul_Koning at dell.com> wrote:
On May 2, 2012, at 8:16 AM, Joe Ferraro wrote:
I did the same with a zipit z2 (got them for $12USD),
which is arm (I believe the pi is as well?!).. honestly, the performance felt much more
realistic than the untuned linux/simh on a modern machine... and for around 100mW, it is /
was hard to beat. The one issue I had was getting the bridge to work over wifi - I
didn't have time (at the time) to tinker...
Yes, the pi is an ARM processor, with 256 MB of RAM. It doesn't have wifi, but it
does (in the "B" model) have 10/100 Ethernet.
paul