GARTHWILSON wrote:
Um, small correction: My site is just not interactive. I'm constantly making improvements though (typically a few a week), based on new things that come up on the forum I realize I hadn't addressed or I needed to make more clear, also new & helpful links that come up on the forum, fixing links that have gone dead, etc..
Garth, I said "static" as in the opposite of "dynamic". Certainly you do update and add to the site, and I'm thankful for that! But I can't ask your website questions. ( If you programmed a bot to answer common questions or something, I suppose I *could* ask your website questions then! ) My point was that reading text can only go so far, asking humans specifics is important. No offense to your most helpful and wonderful website.
GARTHWILSON wrote:
Code was written on paper only, and assembled by hand, and programmed into the EPROM with a manual home-made programmer where I set each address and data by switches and pushed the button for the program pulse, which was super slow, but worse, very prone to human error.
I started that way too, just in 2021. Funny humans
BigDumbDinosaur wrote:
In my case, my employer had a cross-assembler that run on the company’s S360 mainframe and was a FORTRAN rendition of the MOS Technology reference assembler that (apparently) was meant to be run on a PDP-11, which machine we didn't have at the time.
Uhh... Wow. That's impressive indeed. Someone transitioning from C++ to Java is child's play in relative perspective.
BigDumbDinosaur wrote:
I can’t answer that question, as everyone learns in different ways. The only thing I can offer is experiment with actual hardware, not simulators, acquire good software development tools.
Good points BDD.
Krangerich wrote:
If you wanted to ask, whats the best things are that you can provide to other people learning 6502:
* Positivity - there is enough nerdrage on the internet
* Useful no-nonsense information - Ben Eaters videos for example are among the best learning resources I've ever seen
* Inspiration
* Curating the existing resources - there is so much information about everything that you get lost in the rabbithole and accomplish nothing
Yes indeed, great list.
Paganini wrote:
But my VIA isn't getting turned on and I'm not getting any output.
Reminds me of a similar issue I heard. Adrian Black (here
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=LU5989eVRZs) discusses VIA issues around the 26 minute mark. I don't know if that's your issue or not, but I came to mind.
BigEd wrote:
One thing about teaching, and about learning, is motivation.
Yes indeed. I myself am a math teacher, and I know full well that if someone does not want to learn, they won't. So many folks get upset at the 'kid in the back with headphones on' or whatever. I personally don't care, if they want to fail, they fail. That's up to them. Am I supposed to yell at them to make them *want* to learn? Ha! Thankfully in college, (some) students pay for their classes and so it is monetarily important for them!
Paganini, I'm going to read that post now.
Thank you everyone!
Chad