rbanffy
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π Joined in 2008
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(Replying to PARENT post)
Of course, the memory would need to be on the same die to be able to function at that speed, but my Apple //e had a full megabyte of RAM (in addition to the 64 on the motherboard) and, IIRC, Appleβs bank switching scheme could accommodate up to 16 megs. The chip would be mostly SRAM.
Talking to anything outside the chip would slow things down considerably though, and using one in place of a real 6502 would be comically weird. Itβd feel like a machine that spends 99.999999% of the time waiting for IO.
Which, amusingly, feels the opposite of mainframes, where the machine appears to never have to wait for IO.
(Replying to PARENT post)
Itβs not that the 8088 was a horrible CPU - it was a pretty ok one - itβs just that the 6502 was a beast of a CPU.
(Replying to PARENT post)
OTOH, I wonder if someone would build something like this - a 6502/65816 with lots of SRAM and system-bus compatible timings - using the cheapest commercially available foundry, how much could it cost.