Thanks! Quite an interesting paper. I vaguely recall readingthis a long time ago.I think the key will be to figure out how to make this a veryeasy to use component. It is not rocket science but willprobably require a few iterations to smooth out any roughedges and to see what evolves.Good to see there is interest in the community!On Jan 28, 2022, at 11:01 AM, Charles Forsyth <charles.forsyth@gmail.com> wrote:https://www.cs.york.ac.uk/rts/static/papers/R:N.C.:Audsley:2006.pdf might be of interest.They turned up at an embedded systems show at Birmingham NEC about that time.I was attending independently, but it was interesting to see,.Wandering about some boring other stands, I found one that was showing off a small embedded device running a remarkable system.There was source code on the screen."Hmm", I asked, "what's the language it's running?"Lars Bok [for it was he], proudly, "It is SmallTalk!" in 64k [I think] on a micro with a real-time garbage collector and in-service code updating on the fly.Just fantastic. We bemoaned the boring nature of most of the stands. I mentioned Styx-on-a-Chip and he wandered off to have a look, returning to say it was also interesting.I forget the name of the system, but eventually the company was sold on or got different investors in, who turned it into a Java thing. As usual.On Fri, 28 Jan 2022 at 10:18, Lucio De Re <lucio.dere@gmail.com> wrote:On 1/28/22, Bakul Shah <bakul@iitbombay.org> wrote:
>
> Think of really simple, low power, low cost devices.
> USB can also provide power. USB+ATtiny85 devel boards
> cost ~$3 even at Amazon. And FPGA boards can be
> pretty inexpensive too. If you can find them.
>
I've recommended olimex.com in the past. They specialise in Open
Architecture Hardware. Their prices are very reasonable and product
range quite broad.
Lucio.
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