Again, I am not the right to answer, but try to guess it yourself.
It is a different architecture, but...

http://www.openbsd.org/pegasos.html

Regards,
David

On Sun, 24 Jul 2011, Tomas Vavrys wrote:

> This looks also promising... http://www.genesi-usa.com/products
> Are there any plans to support this architecture?
>
> 2011/7/24 David Vasek <va...@fido.cz>:
>> Hi!
>>
>> I am not the right person to answer this and don't want to spread any
>> nonsense. There are others here who are.
>>
>> What I can say is, any m68k CPU in its era was much much saner than any
>> member of the x86 family. Today, I would rather look for more sanity at
>> sparc64 (which survives in rather small niche market) or alpha (which has
>> been violently murdered). But hey, I don't have assembler level experience
>> with neither of these two.
>>
>> Nonetheless, as I said earlier, I would focus on the platform which is the
>> target of my development efforts.
>>
>> Regards,
>> David
>>
>>
>> On Sun, 24 Jul 2011, Billy wrote:
>>
>>> David,
>>>
>>> If "learning a sane and proper computer architecture" is the perpose, what
>>> system do you recommend from the list of platform that OBSD supports?
>>>
>>> thanks and regards,
>>>
>>> bill
>>>
>>> David Vasek <va...@fido.cz> )s 2011&~7$k24$i $U$H7:52 <g9D!G
>>>
>>>> On Sun, 24 Jul 2011, Tomas Vavrys wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> This device will be used only for my learning purposes. I would like
>>>>> to jump on C and compilers later. Is it better to start with RISC or
>>>>> CISC? Should I buy rather x86?
>>>>
>>>> Buy the platfrom you want to learn. x86 architecture is full of its
>>>> design issues and is quite different from others, but if you want to 
>>>> develop
>>>> for x86, then it does not make sense to learn anything else instead of it.
>>>>
>>>> Regards,
>>>> David

Reply via email to