At 2022-12-14T10:39:59-0500, Brad Spencer wrote: > "G. Branden Robinson" writes: > The source to OS-9/6809 would have been released by Microware a long > time ago had it not been for a particular person in the user > community. Got mucked up. I fell out of following it after the BSD > Unixs became available. They guy's name wasn't Mark Siegel, was it? (Feel free to reply privately.) > Level II was nice. It was able to use bank switching and would allow > a set of random 8k memory blocks out of the 128k or 512k present in > the CC3 system to be mapped into the 6809 64k address space. The > Color Computer didn't support memory protection, so no paging or any > real process protection, but this banking allowed for a lot of > possibilities. I know that there was other OS-9 systems around that > ran Level II but I don't really know how they managed memory. I would > suspect it to be simular to the CC3, but that is just a guess on my > part. I ask because I asked around elsewhere, and this guy got very hostile very fast, and touted the GIME chip as performing "address translation" as if it were a Motorola 68451 or something. (I'm not sure even _that_ does address translation in the sense we think of it today, but in any case it was a more powerful, more complex and therefore expensive part than Tandy was ever going to replicate or put in their Color Computers.) Regards, Branden