FPGAme
fromthetransistor
FPGAme | fromthetransistor | |
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1 | 14 | |
4 | 3,737 | |
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0.0 | 0.0 | |
almost 3 years ago | over 2 years ago | |
SystemVerilog | ||
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FPGAme
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My first FPGA project, a NES emulator rendering super mario. I'm so excited had to share with someone :O
If anyone cares I got it on github The Quartus project to it : https://github.com/2bitsin/FPGAme The simulation : https://github.com/2bitsin/Q2A03
fromthetransistor
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how to access geo hotz course on github
geohot/fromthetransistor: From the Transistor to the Web Browser, a rough outline for a 12 week course (github.com)
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Should I take this offer?
Batchelor at a top 10 uni in the uk and that's it really. Lots and lots of books on compilers and https://github.com/geohot/fromthetransistor
- Building modern level computers from scratch!
- Where can you find this course,mentioned in geohot's github?
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Great ways to enrich myself with Computer Science while I am on a break from school?
I highly recommend this repository: https://github.com/geohot/fromthetransistor
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Need help buying an FPGA board
First time posting here (don't post much). I came across this https://github.com/geohot/fromthetransistor and want to do this project. I have done some of the software parts. Now I want to do the hardware parts and was wondering which FPGA would be best. The project is ARM based but I am doing a RISC-V version. Maybe if I can do this one, I can do the ARM based version at some point as well.
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Ask HN: What books are recommended to learn re semiconductors industry?
Hard to answer this question well without a little bit of additional context. I'm very focused on the software side of things, so I am mostly familiar with resources that tackle how software interacts with various platforms and architectures.
I can recommend some resources in that vein (maybe they'll be useful if you/the reader have a software background):
The most frequently recommended book from a software perspective is "Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective" (http://csapp.cs.cmu.edu/3e/home.html).
For a nice gentle intro, you can also read "The Elements of Computing Systems" (https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/elements-computing-systems) that accompanies a course called "Nand2Tetris".
George Hotz also compiled a list of topics to cover to learn the computing stack from bottom-to-top (https://github.com/geohot/fromthetransistor).
These resources are mostly software-oriented, so they wouldn't give you much insight into modern chip fabrication, but if you're coming from a software background, may prove to be useful for building on what you already know.
- Learn computer science from first principles
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Ask HN: What do you say to someone who wants to get into software development?
Start for the real basics and learn CS from first principles !
https://github.com/geohot/fromthetransistor
- From the Transistor to the Web Browser
What are some alternatives?
Q2A03 - My attempt to write a NES emulator in Verilog.