2018-03-14 20:45 GMT+01:00 Gerrit Heitsch <gerrit@laosinh.s.bawue.de>: > On 03/14/2018 08:22 PM, Mia Magnusson wrote: >> >> Den Wed, 14 Mar 2018 20:08:56 +0100 skrev Gerrit Heitsch >> <gerrit@laosinh.s.bawue.de>: >>> >>> On 03/14/2018 07:47 PM, Hegedűs István wrote: >>>> >>>> What could we win with those extra 5 CPU cycles per scanline? Comparing to today's fast CPUs its nothing. >> >> (Well, in theory for some people it might be usable for learning 6502 assembler which still is a skill that's requested by employers). > > > Not surprising: > > https://hackaday.com/2018/03/14/teardown-the-oregon-trail-handheld/ > > Seems to contain a NES-on-a-chip which means a 6502. https://hackaday.com/2018/03/14/teardown-the-oregon-trail-handheld/#comment-4422988 Must be some unusual "NES on a chip" - or maybe this is how the "NOAC-s" are designed now. We need to wait for the EEPROM contents analysis. Regards, KonradReceived on 2018-03-15 10:07:22
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