206 points · 74 comments · 1 month ago · marcodiego
forums.atariage.comlproven
nonamenoslogan
SoftTalker
The TI-99/4A was the first computer I owned as a teenager. I had used TRS-80s and Apple ][ at school. I eventually bought the expansion box and a couple of accessory cards (floppy disk drive, memory and RS232). It all went in the e-waste dumpster about 20 years ago during a move.
MBCook
All due to TI’s desire to use the same chip standards across all their machines big and small, IIRC.
guptadeepak
The lack of dedicated registers meant a lot of memory access, which slowed things down considerably. This is probably why it never gained the same traction as the 6502-based systems like the Apple II or Atari.
I'm curious to see how this UNIX-like OS addresses those limitations. It's a pretty neat accomplishment if it can provide a usable environment on that hardware.
userbinator
Tepix
glimshe
butterisgood
Context switching and message passing (synchronous anyway) are the same thing when you consider how rendezvous works.
BLWP instructions seem like this was “meant to be”.
b00ty4breakfast
arnonejoe
hunterpayne
tombert
UncleOxidant
buildsjets
bananamogul
Zardoz84
haunter
https://forums.atariage.com/topic/380883-unix99-a-unix-like-...
It was called the Geneve 9640 from Myarc:
https://dressupgeekout.com/geneve/
http://www.mainbyte.com/ti99/geneve/geneve.html
Wikipedia has a decent article:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geneve_9640
12 MHz un-crippled 16-bit CPU, 80 column text, 256 colour graphics, up to 2 MB of RAM.
That would be much more promising for a Unix-like OS!
They are extremely rare these days, but a cheapo emulation would be great fun -- it's able to run most software for the 99/4A.