GaBuZoMeu wrote:
I'm still wondering why people still trying to push these old fashioned parts up to or even beyond their limits? During their times there was no other way, but today?
During their days (1976'ish) you could just buy a pdp-11 or an ibm (not the small ones, the big ones
or one of those big-ass trs-80 things that came with a desk attached and a bunch of 8" floppy drives. there never was any 'need' to 'push parts up to their limits' and neither is there now in the pc world (they can just go and buy an ibm power7 system which will happily run at 4ghz or 5ghz per core, which is roughly twice what a single core in a pc will do
(and guess what, they're cheaper than xeons
hell they can buy a few racks full of them and build a supercomputer out of them
if you need to 'push parts to their limits' you got the wrong computer for the job, or you didn't buy enough computers to do the job within an acceptable time.
but. systems do need to be tested as part of normal product development. so you build like 10 of them and make them run in the oven, in the fridge, underwater, on the moon, while exposed to radioactive particles, next to a 10 megawatt tv transmitter, whatever driving full load and more. normally you make 1500 of them and see how many % of them failed within how much time.
also the signals should remain nice and square'ish on the scope and not turn into spikes. stuff should not broadcast radio while it's doing it's job, it also should not use the wall outlet as an extension of it's databus leaking data onto either the electricity network or it's ground connector (ps/2 keyboards much?
etc. this is where the 'testing' part comes in. it's not about 'seeing how fast it will go' it's about seeing if it's good enough not to crap up on you halfway through. also the 65c02 and 65c816 are not 'old fashioned parts' they do the job. they are proven to do the job and nothing but the job. are 'lightswitches' old fashioned parts?, drills, definately old fashioned parts. lasers are far cooler. steeringwheels, gas pedals and brakes in cars, not to mention stick shifters, 'old fashioned parts' you could after all use a nifty joystick or a 'touchscreen' running that android garbage
(now don't give car manufacturers any more retarded ideas than they already recently got
6502's weren't the height of technology and speed when they came out. the whole 'microcomputer revolution' which they caused was more of a side effect but they never were the ultimum in cpu power, ever. they were cheap, multivendor, reliable, easy to implement, and got the job done. and they still are all of that today. if it was a somewhat 'larger' job you wanted done you would not buy a 6502 based system, even in 1976. we had a kim-1 at home somewhere around that time, shortly before the first ibm pc came around, but also stacks of punch cards for an ibm mainframe. which is how the real work was done. punching cards with a manual tool and flow charts on paper. nuff said on that.
you don't take a 6502 to run the accounting of your bank on now do you
hate to break it to all those 'my zx spectrum is better than your c64' people but neither of them even were 'high tech' even on the day they came out. they did have fancy colors and sounds tho
but even in those fields one could buy better systems. the average video arcade cabinet of those days by far has better capabilities for that. consumer stuff will always be a decade behind the real stuff. now. as for the 6502. it was meant to compete with the motorola 6800. so it was meant for industrial control applications straight from the start and that pretty much is the thing it does best and still does today and probably still will do 40 years from now.