Thanks to Mike for keeping 6502.org up and running for all those years... and for hosting my homepage.
Also thanks to Mike, Garth and the other moderators for keeping the spam (and the spammers) out of the forum, I can imagine that's a lot of work.
Started lurking the forum in 2001, and without the existence of 6502.org I wouldn't have tried to build a TTL CPU running 6502 machine code.
Signed up in the forum in 2012, it took Garth 3 years to drag me into the forum (mainly because I never had posted in a forum before).
But to me, over the years this forum here became something special, it's the only place in the internet where I'm still active.
I really would miss to hang out with the members of our little community.
Speaking of the community, it's amazing how big the community, the resource pool, and the level of knowledge have grown since the beginning.
So far, we have seen:
Projects with old NMOS 6502 chips, projects with the recent chips from WDC.
Projects where old and new technology (including non_6502 parts) are creatively cobbled together.
Projects that emulate the 6502 on a different CPU\microcontroller.
Projects that implement the 6502 (or a modified\enhanced version thereof) in a FPGA.
TTL implementations of the 6502, and reverse engineering attempts for the silicon of old chips.
...and I think this list isn't complete.
Thanks to everybody in the community for giving this place an amazing level of creativity, which IMHO is hard to find in any of the other forums out there.
The 6502 is anything but dead or obsolete, and I hope it goes on like this well into the far future.
AFAIK none of the other CPUs from the 70s can compete with this.
My first CPU was a 6502, my last CPU will be a 6502, and I'm not spending much time with remembering the CPUs I had tinkered with in between.
BTW: maybe it's a bit too early now, but when is the exact time and date to celebrate the 20 years anniversary of 6502.org ?
;---
Edit: 20 years anniversary for the forum (the old Delphi forum) would be November 25, 2019, at 5:38 pm forum time.
Thanks to BigEd for digging
this out.