Originally posted by BrilloPad
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Originally posted by TheFaQQer View PostHam and tomato sandwich, with mustard.
It's my favourite.
Oh, and hello allComment
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Ooohhh, goody
Wandering round the intranet wiki, I've just found the technical documentation for one of ClientCorp's coolest products!
Lots to read...Comment
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Originally posted by BrilloPad View Postmeeting my boss at previous bankComment
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Originally posted by zeitghostI've spent many happy hours wandering around clients' intraweb thingies...
One can find useful(?) tools therein sometimes...
I found lots of interesting things then, tooComment
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Originally posted by NickFitz View PostOoohhh, goody
Wandering round the intranet wiki, I've just found the technical documentation for one of ClientCorp's coolest products!
Lots to read...
Oh joy, oh bliss!Comment
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Originally posted by zeitghostNot forgetting the odd 6502 or two...
I actually got caught by that when writing a sprite routine on the BBC Micro. The confusing thing was that, if one inserted a bit of code to help one debug the inexplicable crashing, it moved the instruction and therefore the processor bug stopped being triggered and the code worked perfectly. So one takes out the debug code, and it starts crashing againComment
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Originally posted by zeitghostAnd for some reason we have shedloads of 6522 VIA chips...
Originally posted by zeitghostPlus a supply of 6845 CRT controllers and 6843 FDC.Comment
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Originally posted by zeitghostI found the source code for an alarm system written in FORTH at one place.
Couldn't be arsed to look at it though.
I implemented FORTH on the Atari ST (68000 assembler). Indirect-threaded, because there wasn't actually any performance gain using direct-threaded. The real win was to keep the top of stack in a data register... although looking back, I sometimes wonder if an address register would have been more optimal for many applications...Comment
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Originally posted by NickFitz View Post... with the JMP indirect bug of blessed memory
I actually got caught by that when writing a sprite routine on the BBC Micro. The confusing thing was that, if one inserted a bit of code to help one debug the inexplicable crashing, it moved the instruction and therefore the processor bug stopped being triggered and the code worked perfectly. So one takes out the debug code, and it starts crashing again
It compiles - ship it.Comment
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