Everytime you post something, we get two or three more laughters out of this topic.
Hear, Hear!. I'm rather enjoying the laughs from his "arguements". Sloppy logic, inappropriate analogies, and constant shifts of opinion that 'prove'....absolutely nothing.
Everyone and their mother agrees the M68k ALONE is a more capable CPU than the hu6280 alone.
First of all, consider that thought. If even one person disagrees, it is false, and thus the whole arguement collapses.
Very Funny. So I asked my wife, and she said "Who cares?" Of course, he's going to say "Well not everyone", just...
and try to limit it to a small group of people. However, if you limit it to the people who already agree, it becomes a
circular arguement : Vocal Opinion shouted is still an opinion - not the truth. You can't convert the convinced.
And I love this one:
I keep hearing arguments from programmers but not evidence.
Nope, no evidence here - just blindly ignore the cycles per instruction that Tom posted. Completely ignore the need to use all registers on a 6800 to do a fast copy. And ignore the fact that the ti- instructions do what are effectively memory copies at a cost of 1 cycle per byte, with a 5 cycle overhead. And are capable of doing so across an entire 64K address space.
Nope, no evidence - that supports your arguement.
I had the privilege of growing up with a programmer/engineer.
Ah, that explains it. He absorbed all his knowledge by being around people who knew what they were talking about
FYI, dude: Tom and I -are- programmers and engineers. Both of us have 25+ years experience at this stuff.
I doubt you have 25+ years of age. Yet, somehow. miraculously, that makes you an expert.
Just keep telling yourself that, you may start to believe it.
And another one I find absolutely hilarious:
FYO that M68K you guys like to brush over has been the choice of programmers and hardware manufacturers for over 30 years now. Nothing reveals success and usability more than a long history.
Think about how funny that really is. The 6502 core was around for years before the 68000. So if longevity = success.....
6502 core wins. Proving his own arguement is wrong. Gotta love that.
And this quote? Spoken like a true 20 something who listens to the companies, and never compares their lines to reality...
Hardware gets better and then cheaper with age and revisions. Everyone knows this
Again with the "everyone"......
Tell that to the folks that lost backwards compatibilty on the ps3.
Tell that to all the people who buy Macs. (My mac mini was only $500 on sale...down from $!k - because they couldn't sell them at that price.)
Tell that to all the people whose phones broke after a year, and had to be replaced - with more expensive models that did tons of things that no one really wants in a phone.
I bet you find a lot of people who disagree about hardware getting "better" or "cheaper".
And my favorite quote, but you have to remember this is from a guy comparing apples to oranges....
Not one word about clock speed and what chip does more faster.
Presumably, a faster clock speed would allow the chip to do more - but that's not always true (anyone else own a 486?)
Given equal clock speeds, I think the 6502 core would outperform the 68000, based on the cycle counts Tom posted.
Even more radically, -ignoring the clock speed- I still believe the 6502 core could outperform a 68000 in a special purpose application - like a video game.
Of course, by his same logic, the New pentiums running at 2.4GHz are better chips than the same exact chips running at 2.0GHz.
<lol>
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Now. before you decide to rip into me (and have fun with it, I really don't care) I don't care either way.
It's not the CPU or the clock speed, or even how much memory a system has. It's what the programmers do with it.
After 40+ years of work, the engineers have pretty much decided the kinds of things a CPU needs to do. They all do the
same things. The field is pretty level anymore. There is no "better". Just "different".