• bArray 8 hours ago

    Looking at the M5Stack Tab5 IoT Development Kit [1] based on the ESP32-P4 - it's a really nice piece of kit.

    [1] https://shop.m5stack.com/products/m5stack-tab5-iot-developme...

    • nottorp 5 hours ago

      Yeah, the first thing I thought of when seeing this was "how long till this tablet thingy will be out of stock everywhere?".

    • jhbadger 3 hours ago

      Pity that this isn't for the Cardputer (a M5Stack device that includes a built in (tiny) screen and keyboard), although it might be impractical on it.

      • zeckalpha 3 hours ago

        Hoping rePalm ends up there, too! https://dmitry.gr/?r=05.Projects&proj=27.%20rePalm

        • dmitrygr an hour ago

          i am doing MIPS first (for V-tech Helio), but i will eventually

        • swiftcoder 10 hours ago

          How performant is this - are we able to achieve similar speeds as an actual 68k Mac on embedded hardware?

          • vardump 8 hours ago

            At 8 MHz, a 68k can execute at most 2M instructions per second. So the answer is going to be yes, if this manages to execute one 68k instruction per ~200 cycles.

            I think executing an instruction is going to be closer to 20-50 cycles than 200, so it should be much faster than a real 68k CPU.

            I think performance is likely to be in the ballpark of a 68040 @20 MHz, but that's just a guess. This would leave 20 cycles for each emulated instruction. With JIT you could reach 200 MHz+ comparable speeds.

            • rasz 7 hours ago

              Everything is coming from PSRAM including frame buffer (at 15 fps) so performance is going to be abysmal.

              • vardump 6 hours ago

                You should be able to cache hot code and data in the SRAM. Although it'd significantly increase complexity.

            • iamflimflam1 8 hours ago

              The P4 is pretty high spec with a 400MHz dual-core RISC-V

              • cardanome 5 hours ago

                Especially as there is a decent working BasiliskII port for the PlayStation Portable with its 333MHz single-core MIPS CPU.

                So this should be much easier.

            • stonogo 2 hours ago

              I note that the vide coding tools managed to keep the license headers in individual files, but the COPYING file containing the GPL2 has not made the transition.

              • anthk 8 hours ago

                VMac would be lighter.