Completely different. The ST and TT used bitplanes whereas the Jag is chunky, and can support both YUV and RGB colourspaces. 640x200 is possible at least https://youtu.be/XI3Pvx5Yh1U?si=2bp93CeNYPTGZZic
OOI why did you go with RC at the lattice bottom rather than generational refs? Not sure how in touch you are with the author of Vale?
What would be good is if effects are used to discharge the ownership obligations, that should dovetail well in Ante. BTW I appreciate the clear effects handling in Ante, very nice!
Yes that’s pretty much how I’ve used AI, though phase zero and one had to be hand-coded until there was enough code for the AI to iterate off. Hand debugging and then showing the AI helps to narrow the number of errors, and how to triage for the next run.
Not quite the same thing, but you can build a similar thing to run linux relatively easily, and the keyboards can be really good that way. You can swap out the SBC for one of your choice eg. https://www.lattepanda.com/lattepanda-iota (why don't AMD do small SBCs?)
and cut a space on the left/right hand side for a trackpoint/optical trackpad (operate from the side)
Good points, but Postgres has all those, along with much better local testing story, easier and more reliable CDC, better UDFs (in Python, Go etc.), a huge ecosystem of extensions for eg. GIS data, no licencing issues ever, API compatability with DuckDB, Doris and other DBs, and (this is the big one) is not Oracle.
Great work on the chip, I’m really onboard with the trusted computing aim!
Is there a way to bootstrap binary code into the reram? I’m thinking being able to ‘hand-type’ in a few hundred byte kernel rather than use a flashing tool
APIs in a B2B style would likely be much more prevalent, less advertising (yay!) and less money in the internet so more like the original internet I guess.
It was a massive shame the TV-toy project at Sinclair did not work out. It was a SOC/low cost computer based on the Inmos transputer (Called the T400, an M212 without dedicated link hardware) around 1983. That might have kept Inmos afloat- they were responsible for a lot of the RAM chip innovation, VGA standard, transputer etc. so the world would have looked very different.
I do wonder what could have been with that chip paired with the Slipstream chip, oh well.
Tip of the hat there, it’s a very selfless thing to commit to caregiving. From a 50kft view, we have an aging demographic globally, and the bet seems to be robotics- hopefully they will get good enough to help meaningfully in this capacity. What happens to an economic system predicated around having more kids (GDP growth) is another concern.