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10 votes
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Slowly booting full Linux on the intel 4004 for fun, art, and absolutely no profit
18 votes -
Zig and emulators
14 votes -
I built my own 16-Bit CPU in Excel | Inkbox
16 votes -
Reverse engineering game code from the Neutral Zone in Yars' Revenge
4 votes -
Big Commander X16 Update!
6 votes -
Blink 1.0 - Userspace virtual machine that can emulate x86-64-linux binaries on any POSIX platform
14 votes -
Recommend me a small SBC!
So I'm looking to do an improved version of this project from a couple of years ago that rebuilt the dreamcast VMU into an emulator system that could even interface with a modified dreamcast...
So I'm looking to do an improved version of this project from a couple of years ago that rebuilt the dreamcast VMU into an emulator system that could even interface with a modified dreamcast controller using the original connector. That project was really neat, but it used a raspberry pi zero, which is frankly anemic for running any emulators past the SNES, and I'd like to find one that's powerful enough to emulate the dreamcast itself, but small enough to fit inside a VMU. To that end, my requirements are:
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Must be of a similar size to the pi zero. Smaller would be better, but it absolutely cannot be more than 40x65mm.
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Must have a processor at least as powerful as a cortex A53, preferably something more powerful like the A72.
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Must have a release of armbian (or similar) with drivers for full video acceleration.
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Must be able to drive a display over SPI.
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Must be available. The NanoPi NEO Core 2 is pretty close to what I need, if maybe a bit underpowered, but it seems to be discontinued and I can't find it anywhere but aliexpress at double the list price.
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Composite video out would be nice.
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Analog audio out would be nice.
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Availability without soldered headers and large ports would be nice, like the pi zero or nanopi neo.
9 votes -
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IBM System/370 Mainframe emulated on a Raspberry Pi Zero
@brianroemmele: I will let out a bit of a secret. I have been running a full IBM System/370 Mainframe on a $5 Raspberry Pi Zero for ~5 years. About 7 times faster System/370. Millions of lines of COBOL JCLs running flawless on a battery. Tested an entire bank's mainframe COBOL on it.
13 votes -
Writing a NES emulator in Rust using generators
11 votes -
Color Emulation
11 votes -
wideNES - Peeking Past the Edge of NES Games
11 votes -
lunatic86, an x86 emulator written in Lua running in OpenComputers running in Minecraft running on Java
16 votes -
Finding and exploiting hidden features of Animal Crossing's NES emulator
18 votes -
Playing SNES games on unmodified NES via Raspberry Pi
11 votes -
Reverse emulating the NES to give it SUPER POWERS!
13 votes