Is this the FASTEST and CHEAPEST 8-Bit Computer Ever?

Ғылым және технология

FlexiSpot E7 standing desk: bit.ly/3EVNWJX
PCBWay www.pcbway.com
The Agon Light claims to be the fastest and cheapest 8-bit computer in the world. Is that true? Let's have a look at it and learn about its surprising "re-writable" architecture.
Links:
Agon Light www.thebyteattic.com/p/agon.html
Agon Light Github github.com/TheByteAttic/AgonL...
TheByteAttic channel / @thebyteattic
BBC Basic port www.bbcbasic.co.uk/bbcbasic/z...
BASIC benchmarck page docs.google.com/spreadsheets/...
Agon Console8 heber.co.uk/agon-console8/
Agon Console 8 Github github.com/AgonConsole8/agon-vdp
Agon Light at PCBWay www.pcbway.com/project/sharep...
Support Noel's Retro Lab on Patreon: / noelsretrolab
You can also support Noel's Retro Lab on KZread by joining this channel:
/ @noelsretrolab
Chapters:
00:00 Intro
03:14 Exterior
04:43 Specs
05:31 BASIC and benchmark
10:04 Architecture
14:13 Re-writeable architecture
19:23 Updating firmware
20:46 Level 1: BASIC
21:58 Level 2: Z80
23:43 Level 3: VDP
25:36 Getting one
27:06 Conclusion
Music tracks:
Funky Stars by McKlain mcklain.bandcamp.com/track/fu...
Battro OST by McKlain mcklain.bandcamp.com/track/ba...
More awesome music by McKlain: www.mcklain.com
🛠 Tools I use ➤ noelsretrolab.com/tools.html
Connect with Noel's Retro Lab:
Discord ➤ / discord
Facebook ➤ / noelsretrolab
Twitter ➤ / noelsretrolab
Instagram ➤ / noelsretrolab
Mailing list ➤ noelsretrolab.com

Пікірлер: 633

  • @NoelsRetroLab
    @NoelsRetroLab7 ай бұрын

    I forgot to mention that you can get 50% off on their chair with E7 standing desk order. Thanks again to FlexiSpot for this amazing workspace!

  • @dieSpinnt

    @dieSpinnt

    7 ай бұрын

    Before I forget it to mention: Grown up men can't get USB-Power supplies with an on/off button/switch? (Or hubs with wonderful on/off switches?). (You after 4:00 , your valid critique about a missing power switch). So good that we girls are here and know the solution for EVERYTHING! (=42) Thanks for showing of this cool device, Noel. Entertaining and educating as usual. Thank you for the video!:)

  • @KaiHenningsen

    @KaiHenningsen

    7 ай бұрын

    @@dieSpinntHmpf - looking at my USB 4-port hub with on/off buttons and LEDs. (Mainly so I can switch my headset on and off without pulling out cables or clicking through menus.) Viel Spaß beim weiteren Spinnen.

  • @SuperHaunts

    @SuperHaunts

    6 ай бұрын

    @@dieSpinnt shutting off the power isn't that big of a deal... but if you have an onboard switch, then you can monitor for proper Shut down including closing open files. Much better than just ripping the rug outWhile you are standing on it.

  • @VioletGiraffe
    @VioletGiraffe7 ай бұрын

    Typical: the peripheral controller is a 32-bit chip 20 times faster than the main CPU.

  • @waytostoned

    @waytostoned

    7 ай бұрын

    Sigh, yeah...

  • @benholroyd5221

    @benholroyd5221

    7 ай бұрын

    I agree, I suspect I come to the opposite conclusion to you though. I infer you're saying you should get rid of the microcontroller. I would say the opposite, get rid of the z80. To me the draw of 80s 8 bits isn't the processor per se, it's the limitations combined with the standardisation and 30+ years collective experience on the platform. A modern microcontroller is still very limited, but it's standardised. I'd like to see something like a pi Pico on a board with a crappy keyboard, vga out, and that's it. That to me would be the spiritual successor to the spectrum/c64

  • @AlexanderRacheev

    @AlexanderRacheev

    7 ай бұрын

    @@benholroyd5221 Just look for the picomiteVGA, it's exactly the thing that you're describing. ESP32-SBC-FabGL by Olimex is also very close to your description, just featuring esp32 instead of Pico.

  • @VioletGiraffe

    @VioletGiraffe

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@benholroyd5221, I'm not at all saying to get rid of the ESP32, and your suggestion makes a lot of sense. I just find this imbalance funny.

  • @benholroyd5221

    @benholroyd5221

    7 ай бұрын

    @@VioletGiraffe it is weird yes. But the thing is they want cheap, and an old processor. The processor probably costs more than MCU. From a performance/common sense/ cost pov, you'd just ditch the z80 entirely. Tbf, back in the day, it wasn't unheard of to have random things more powerful than the actual computer you attached it to. The c64 disc drive had its own 6502. The laser printer for the Mac se had a more powerful processor than the pc itself had. The cpm card for the apple 2 was basically an entire computer with a z80 in it.

  • @talideon
    @talideon7 ай бұрын

    On Europe, Olimex are a great option, and their Agon Lite variant has an extra port (their 'UEXT' port) that gives you access to some neat modules they provide, and exposes I²C, SPI, and RS232.

  • @S0urceror
    @S0urceror7 ай бұрын

    Great to see you”re enthusiastic about the Agon. I’m the author of the Dezog debugger and ElectronHAL and ElectronOS. With this you have the concept of personalities so that it can assume the identity of a CP/M machine or a MSX1. I even have Kings Valley running on a virtual TMS9918.

  • @jackshen2660

    @jackshen2660

    22 күн бұрын

    well, the esp32 is a 32-bits mcu dual core, 240MHz. You can actually write a "wine" liked software. Which means one chip for all.

  • @trance_trousers
    @trance_trousers7 ай бұрын

    I don't usually get excited by modern day recreations of 8 bit computers, but this one is very interesting. As someone who spent hours and hours programming on an Acorn Electron back in the 80s, the BBC Basic included on this is a big plus, for me at least.

  • @leooz8071

    @leooz8071

    6 ай бұрын

    Sir, thank you for your service!!!👷

  • @richard.20000

    @richard.20000

    3 ай бұрын

    Why using combo Z80+ESP to complicate things? ESP32 is modern 32-bit RISC CPU running at 240 MHz with HW FPU support, some versions are even dual-core. 240 MHz ESP32 can emulate Z80 code while being faster than the new 18 MHz Z80e. It seems to me overcomplicated to use heterogenous CPU. I think better way is to use only ESP32 - it will be cheaper, faster and can emulate ZX Spectrum, C64, NES easily. Maybe ESP+ESP or even 3x ESP for Amiga-like coprocessors. To be honest I do not see the need to reinvent 8-bit computer for other reason than studen project purpose. Everybody knows 8-bit computers were bad, 16-bit were less bad and 1st usable minimum is 32-bit (and that's why most today MCU are 32-bit). I don't want to sound negative. It's meant as constructive critique. Otherwise good job, I appreciate every new home-brew computer.

  • @espressomatic
    @espressomatic7 ай бұрын

    USB-A for power? That's... bizarre. And completely non-standard.

  • @NoelsRetroLab

    @NoelsRetroLab

    7 ай бұрын

    Right? Although I think it was changed to a USB-B in the latest board revision.

  • @lawrencemanning

    @lawrencemanning

    7 ай бұрын

    It’s typical of the guys mindset. You only have to look at his YT channel. He is well known to manage his “community” and delete comments that criticise his choices etc. I steer clear if anything he has done.

  • @rog2224

    @rog2224

    7 ай бұрын

    @@lawrencemanning You aiming for 'bitter' there?

  • @toddbeets
    @toddbeets7 ай бұрын

    I have an AgonLight, Maximite 2, and the Ultimate 64 and reflect on the niche for each one. The Ultimate 64 is exquisite -- its only downside is that there is not an Ultimate 128 with BASIC 7.0. The Maximite 2 is powerful and appealing, the ultimate in BASIC-all-the-things at amazing ARM speeds -- but BASIC is your whole world, If the Maximite 2 had the equivalent of Supermon and Turbo Macro Pro built in, it would be a Commodore 64 update for the 21st century. I haven't figured out the AgonLight niche yet -- but am enthusiastic.

  • @MonochromeWench
    @MonochromeWench7 ай бұрын

    It really surprises me that after almost 50 years z80 based processor cores are still being manufactured. The intel 8080 architecture really had some legs on it.

  • @joefish6091

    @joefish6091

    7 ай бұрын

    8080 was first gen and meh, The Z80 is on another level. ditto the HD64180 (Z80 on steroids) and Zilogs Z180, theres also the Zilog CPU with Tiny BASIC built in.

  • @jyvben1520

    @jyvben1520

    7 ай бұрын

    but the Z80 is not from intel, compatible but greatly enhanced.

  • @amihart9269

    @amihart9269

    7 ай бұрын

    Yes it did, 40 of them to be exact.

  • @Bob-1802

    @Bob-1802

    7 ай бұрын

    Amazingly these are very cheap to get, the new pin-to-pin compatible versions (CMOS Z84C00xx) can be bought for less than five bucks. Other new old processors like the 65C02 are more expensive.

  • @davidg1830

    @davidg1830

    7 ай бұрын

    Z80 cores continue on production, but this SBC CPU isn't Z80, nor it is 8-bits. eZ80 CPU isn't an 8 bits CPU, although Zilog advertised it like being 8-bits, in fact it is a 24 bits CPU. eZ80 has 24 bit registers, 24 bit address, 16 or 24 bits ALU, so clearly it isn't an 8 bits CPU. Of course it can be set in Z80 compatibility mode, the same way a 32 bit x86 CPU from Intel can be in 16 bit more.

  • @SpikeBlighty
    @SpikeBlighty7 ай бұрын

    Excellent review. I like your thoughts regarding the custom OS layer. The interview with the creator was very enlightening. Thank you.

  • @RMCRetro
    @RMCRetro7 ай бұрын

    Nice overview, we've just sent h0ffman a Console8 and Steve has cranked the VDP up to 32 channels of audio so hopefully he can make it (and all Agons) sing!

  • @NoelsRetroLab

    @NoelsRetroLab

    7 ай бұрын

    Awesome! I'm very curious to see how the Console8 evolves!

  • @thebyteattic

    @thebyteattic

    7 ай бұрын

    WOW!!!

  • @willofirony
    @willofirony6 ай бұрын

    You never mentioned the 'inline' assembler on the BBC Basic. I had a couple of models of the BBC, up to Master. The Basic experience was probably as good as it gets for Basic but the inline 6502 assembler was awesome. It could reference Basic variables and DATA lines and it could produce pure assembler applications. This flexibility made it wonderful for 'what if's in minutes and see the results in seconds.

  • @NoelsRetroLab

    @NoelsRetroLab

    6 ай бұрын

    You're right, I didn't know about it until afterwards. The Z80 por does allow Z80 assembly, which is awesome. I'm super impressed with BBC BASIC (and quite a bit jealous that wasn't my BASIC experience back in the day).

  • @jasmijndekkers
    @jasmijndekkers7 ай бұрын

    Nice content and a great video. Keep up the good job! Greetings from Steven from the Netherlands

  • @ezContents
    @ezContents7 ай бұрын

    That's an eye-opener. Thanks for the complete overview.

  • @SuperDavidEF
    @SuperDavidEF7 ай бұрын

    I'm definitely interested in a follow-up video in the next year or two.

  • @wombatillo
    @wombatillo7 ай бұрын

    USB A to USB A is an abomination. Was there an actual reason to not use B, micro B or C type USB?

  • @rog2224

    @rog2224

    7 ай бұрын

    It was what he had to hand wend designing the original, and what Noel has is one of those Rev 1 boards. The Origins board uses a more standard USB-B (or C on the Olimex clone)

  • @greenaum

    @greenaum

    7 ай бұрын

    It's an official abomination, "illegal" under the USB rules. An A-to-A cable could be used to connect two power supplies together causing all sorts of disaster, possibly fires. The bloke must have just had a lot of type-A sockets hanging around, but yeah you never use an A socket to receive power, it's always for the supply side.

  • @ShinyQuagsire

    @ShinyQuagsire

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@greenaumactually they legalized it under USB 3.0, and it's used for USB device mode/debug on some laptops

  • @andresdominguez9333

    @andresdominguez9333

    7 ай бұрын

    @@rog2224 The USB connector in the pictures of the Olimex's board looks to me like a type A. If the pictures and documentation is out of date it would be great if they can update it.

  • @manicdataminer

    @manicdataminer

    7 ай бұрын

    The Olimex version made some changes, including using USB C for power and female USB A for the keyboard (which still has to be PS/2 compatible). Otherwise, it is 100% compatible with the original version shown here.

  • @iamdarkyoshi
    @iamdarkyoshi7 ай бұрын

    Given this is open source, I feel like a single PCB with modern mechanical keyboard switches and this board's hardware all in one would be pretty easy to do.

  • @NoelsRetroLab

    @NoelsRetroLab

    7 ай бұрын

    For sure. I wish someone would do something like that and I'll design a case for it 😃 Seriously, being open source, it's begging for it.

  • @greenaum

    @greenaum

    7 ай бұрын

    It just doesn't make sense to build your own keyboard. Decent keyswitches by Cherry are a few quid each. Even cheap nasty clicky buttons would cost a ton more than just buying a cheap keyboard. PC keyboards have been a huge commodity item for decades. The cost is as low as they can make them. It doesn't make sense to make your own unless you have a really good reason, and the main idea for this thing seems to be "Z80 + cheap". You can always do it yourself if you're willing to spend the money, or do some 3D printing. But even cheap PC keyboards are pretty good, you'll have to spend a ton of money to equal one, never mind beat it.

  • @wishusknight3009

    @wishusknight3009

    7 ай бұрын

    @@greenaum I think it would be kind of neat to biuld something akin to the Pi400. Though using an existing keyboard structure.

  • @greenaum

    @greenaum

    7 ай бұрын

    @@wishusknight3009 Just thinking... for your money you might even be as well using a touch screen. Or even just the resistive element without a screen. Or perhaps capacitive sensors, on a PCB, beneath some sheet of thin plastic or something. It'd be better than those horrible click switches, and be implemented in software so more configurable. Just get an XY coordinate and decide what key that is. There's the old-fashioned resistive carbon sheet or even indium tin oxide. But I bet there's something better you could do. Maybe the technology used in things like phone screens could be simplified down to something practical. Or else, maybe, just put some electrodes on a PCB, put wide wires on each side of a rectangle, and spray some carbon in between, or even roll it on as paint. Consistent thickness would be important. Or else just buy a cheap keyboard. But making a traditional keyboard-style keyboard would cost you way more than it does for companies who churn out millions of them. You could maybe adapt them with 3D printed keys. Actually somebody has produced new keyboard membranes for old 1980s computers. Maybe use one or two of those, steal the rubber domes from a cheap keyboard, and print your own body and keys. Or if they can have membrane manufactured, so can you. Maybe a flex PCB? Two sheets of that and some flexible plastic separating them with holes cut in it. You could make any keyboard you liked from scratch with that, I suppose. Long as you nicked the rubber domes from somewhere. Without a membrane, there's the PCB buttons that joypads use, with domes with a carbon button in the middle. Somebody must make those domes though you'd have to buy a lot I suppose, still you might sell the rest on. Maybe you could even 3D print the domes with some floppy springy plastic and get the carbon buttons from, I dunno, graphite? Or dip rubber in conductive paint?

  • @wishusknight3009

    @wishusknight3009

    7 ай бұрын

    @@greenaum I have gotten a new PCB for one of my Model M's. it is not a small undertaking putting it all together, there is also a small list of replacement parts one needs to get to make a keyboard, not everything can be transferred from an old unit. Though modifying the gerbers to incorporate the circuitry for this computer does seem to be very possible. Beyond my abilities but not out of the question. Getting a donor board could make it cheaper. I was thinking though to just build this little unit as it sits, into an existing keyboard of some sort. Though finding something with the space is the real challenge. It would need to be an ergonomic or something that has some internal height and rear real estate for plugs.

  • @deckard5pegasus673
    @deckard5pegasus6736 ай бұрын

    I have to disagree with people saying the Argon is not a true "retro" computer. If you study the architecture of the original Apple 1 computer, it was designed almost in the exact same way, with a "terminal graphic" circuit independent of the CPU circuitry. Also saying using the ESP is "cheating" IMO is incorrect if your are comparing it to other supposed modern "retro" computers. Other computers like the commander x16 use FPGAs, SD cards, etc.. all of which are NOT retro, but modern components not found in original 8 bit computers. Using an ESP is ingenious, opening the computer up to all sorts of tinkering and hacking, allowing people to learn so much more. Obviously this is inline with true spirit and real reason of the "retro" movement.

  • @winstonsmith478
    @winstonsmith4787 ай бұрын

    Thanks! Now I understand the capabilities of this SBC. Also, I didn't know about the Agon Console 8.

  • @nfavor
    @nfavor7 ай бұрын

    James Sharman on KZread made an 8bit pipelined CPU. I forget the clock speed but because it's pipelined the performance was impressive. I'm curious how his processor would do with your benchmark

  • @skilz8098

    @skilz8098

    2 ай бұрын

    His build is amazing. I've watched just about his entire series towards it. It's like he picked up where Ben Eater left off.

  • @shaurz
    @shaurz7 ай бұрын

    Olimex make a version of this and they're also making the Neo6502 which uses an RP2040 for the graphics.

  • @jedivino
    @jedivino7 ай бұрын

    Thank you Noel for featuring my game Draegerman! Yes, it was my first learning basic game and it was a really fun way of learning on the Agon Light.

  • @NoelsRetroLab

    @NoelsRetroLab

    7 ай бұрын

    You're welcome! That was actually really impressive for a learning game! ❤️ (That's coming from a game developer with 30+ years of experience 😃).

  • @Davidprograma
    @Davidprograma7 ай бұрын

    Hi Noel, and thanks for this video. I had already heard about the AgonLight, but after watching your video I ran to Mouser and got one - this weekend I will be tinkering with it. I've been thinking about designing/building my own retro (or not, just simple) computer for a few years without getting to a firm conclusion. But the architecture of the AgonLight is quite close to what I ended designing in my head - an ESP32 for video and I/O, and another CPU for the main work load. I already know the ESP32 from working on the ESPectrum emulator, and its tricks for generating video in software. As I am realizing that I don't have the time for all the things I wanna do, I've decided to take a shortcut and try the Agon. Maybe I could write a game for it - I just wrote a game for the Next, so who knows? Thanks again for your video, it has clarified a lot of things about the Agon.

  • @amihart9269
    @amihart92697 ай бұрын

    I actually had heard of the eZ80 before because I had played around with writing assembly code for the TI-84+CE which has an eZ80 CPU.

  • @rustkitty
    @rustkitty5 ай бұрын

    This is a really interesting concept, I'd love to see what a demo scene could do with this hardware. Also like you, normally I'm not too excited about 8-bit computers where you have to plug in a keyboard, but with this hardware and firmware flexibility it could be repatriated into any existing microcomputer with a dead board. Or into one of the many aftermarket keyboard+case combos for Apple ][, Spectrum/N-GO, etc.

  • @RichardHallas
    @RichardHallas7 ай бұрын

    Great video! At last, the sort of coverage the Agon deserves. I’m just surprised that you didn’t mention one of the most important aspects of the system, namely the GPIO, which is addressable from BBC BASIC. Great for hobbyist electronics tinkerers or people who want to use the machine as a super-easy to program microcontroller. What other system lets you address pins directly in interpreted BASIC? And again, this is very educational. I see the Agon Light as a spiritual successor to the BBC Micro (more so than the Raspberry Pi, actually). It’s an instant-on computer that you can just turn on and program; it uses BBC BASIC, which is the best and fastest 8-bit BASIC around (ignoring its 32-bit version!); and it can interface easily with all kinds of home-grown hardware projects, just like the BBC Micro was uniquely good at. Much as I’m excited by Console8, I’d love to see the Agon being taken up in schools and universities etc. and used as an educational tool there for both computing and hardware projects. I think it’s perfectly suited for that, in a way that hasn’t been seen since the 1980s.

  • @another3997

    @another3997

    7 ай бұрын

    RiscOS on the Raspberry Pi let's you address individual gpio pins in it's integrated, interpreted BBC Basic. It also runs extremely fast. 😉 The BBC Micro was complex and expensive when released, so was only accessible to many people via school or college etc. That severely limited it's user base. The RPi is the opposite, it also has the most amazing official and 3rd party support, and a huge community. It's something I don't see any other system getting close to. The Agon II Light looks to be a great system, I'm looking forward to getting one. I hope it and it's community continue to grow, but it's audience is different to the Pi's.

  • @niekvans

    @niekvans

    7 ай бұрын

    As nice as BBC BASIC may be, I have to respectfully disagree that this should be used in schools/universities. For young people of today, it makes much more sense to learn something like Python (or MicroPython), which could in some ways be regarded of the BASIC of today. By learning Python, you learn something that can immediately be applied throughout your study/career, unlike BASIC, which is basically useless for any professional work. You can get an ESP32-based board with VGA output that can run MicroPython for something like 15 euro. Another option is starting with something like an Arduino, which is also very easy to get started with programming.

  • @SuperHaunts

    @SuperHaunts

    6 ай бұрын

    @@another3997 what ARE the Statements for reading GPI o on On RiscOS?

  • @tohaason

    @tohaason

    5 ай бұрын

    @@niekvans If that was just any BASIC I would agree, but at least BBC BASIC is structured. A structured language is great for teaching your mind how to design a program. In that sense Pascal (a useful variant like e.g. Turbo Pascal - which is probably what I will use on the Agonlight2 when I get mine - I'll move to CP/M) is a great way to get into the right mindset before proceeding to something else. It doesn't really matter which language you start on, as long as it's not something like non-structured BASIC. Moving to something else is easy-peasy.

  • @wyattr7982
    @wyattr79827 ай бұрын

    Hot take: SMD soldering is a lot easier than people realize and I think it’s totally within the realm of your average DIYer

  • @NoelsRetroLab

    @NoelsRetroLab

    7 ай бұрын

    I agree with you in general... until you get into really fine pitches. I wouldn't recommend soldering some of those ICs for someone doing their first SMD soldering.

  • @SuperDavidEF

    @SuperDavidEF

    7 ай бұрын

    @@NoelsRetroLab I'm agreeing with you on this one. I have done some soldering of some small SMD components. Even though it was a bit intimidating at first, I got through it and it turned out to be no big deal. But these chips on the AGON Light would probably be more than I could handle without a lot more practice!

  • @johncochran8497

    @johncochran8497

    7 ай бұрын

    Surface tension and solder mask are your friends my dear fellow. The rest is simple physics which you need not bother to think about since it's handled automatically.

  • @another3997

    @another3997

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@johncochran8497Walking a tightrope across the Grand Canyon is just "simple physics", as is jumping out a plane at 10,000 feet. I wouldn't recommend either without some kind of practice... and probably a parachute too. 😉

  • @johncochran8497

    @johncochran8497

    7 ай бұрын

    @@another3997But the tightrope is a situation where physics is working against you. Soldering is where the physics is working for you. As I said, solder mask and surface tension are your friends.

  • @ToumalRakesh
    @ToumalRakesh7 ай бұрын

    I still wanna get a Color Maximite 2. It sucks that that thing isn't available anywhere.

  • @ericrosen6626
    @ericrosen66267 ай бұрын

    I keep a couple of USB-to-ps/2 adaptors in my "toolbox" (and ps/2-to-din) just in case I run into an older system. In the last 10-15 years, I can count how many times I've needed any of those adapters on one hand while still having fingers left over-- but I do KNOW that if I threw them away, I would have a need the next day :)

  • @cjheeley
    @cjheeley7 ай бұрын

    Bernardo is a really talented individual who's created something special. I've watched all his videos on the development of the Agon light (although I didn't understand a lot of what he was talking about). I really love his restoration videos of old 8 bit systems, the Wang being a favourite of mine. He really goes the extra mile and his attention to detail is beyond belief. A really cool guy and a fantastic YT channel

  • @NoelsRetroLab

    @NoelsRetroLab

    7 ай бұрын

    Yes! And that reminds me I didn't add a link to his channel in the description. Done. Thanks!

  • @OzRetrocomp

    @OzRetrocomp

    7 ай бұрын

    Bernardo knows his stuff. The stuff he does is well above my pay grade, but I enjoy seeing and hearing about it.

  • @ct92404

    @ct92404

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@OzRetrocompI feel the same way. You don't necessarily have to 100 percent completely understand something to be able to enjoy it. I get the basic idea, and that is enough for me for now.

  • @whiskeytuesday
    @whiskeytuesday7 ай бұрын

    If someone was to implement the gameboy PPU in the VDP... and write some kind of transpiler to translate the LR35902 specific opcodes to the eZ80, or a really thin interpreter layer maybe... this thing would be a reasonably phyically accurate gameboy color. That's kind of neat.

  • @NoelsRetroLab

    @NoelsRetroLab

    7 ай бұрын

    Right. You could do that with almost any old/slow enough platform, right? That's the beauty of this device.

  • @whiskeytuesday

    @whiskeytuesday

    7 ай бұрын

    @@NoelsRetroLab you could, I mention this specifically because the LR is sort of a z80 already (and sort of not; It's not a strict subset or superset of the 8080 or the z80, weirdly).

  • @AndrewHelgeCox

    @AndrewHelgeCox

    7 ай бұрын

    You might have issues with the timing being off.

  • @piconano
    @piconano7 ай бұрын

    Strangely enough, the ESP32 inside will beat the eZ80 to the curb. I prefer 8-bit computers with lots of standard ICs too. He could've used 2xESP32-S3 and go for the title of "cheapest 32 bit computer".

  • @NoelsRetroLab

    @NoelsRetroLab

    7 ай бұрын

    Right. That's when things get weird. If you just want max performance you could even remove the Z80 and implement everything in the ESP32 😃 But it's not all that different from those accelerator boards on Amigas or other computers that end up being more powerful than the computer itself.

  • @Rob2

    @Rob2

    7 ай бұрын

    Of course when you are looking at things like that you just get a Raspberry Pi4 or Pi5 and have a "cheapest and much faster computer"...

  • @another3997

    @another3997

    7 ай бұрын

    The most interesting 8 bit micros were the ones with custom ICs for graphics, sound and I/O. Most of the '80s and '90s computers had them, and of course, Nvidia, AMD and Intel will sell you custom graphics chips that use a standard connector and fairly standard APIs.

  • @another3997

    @another3997

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@Rob2It gets even worse if you consider buying a cheap, used PC or even a new one. The price to performance ratio can be pretty amazing. Fortunately, we have the luxury of choosing from a variety of devices, whichever takes your fancy.

  • @Rob2

    @Rob2

    7 ай бұрын

    I mean the Pi5 could run an emulator for some 8-bit system at a much higher speed than this board... and with much better specs for video and storage. @@another3997

  • @greenaum
    @greenaum7 ай бұрын

    RT Russell's Z80 BASIC was used on the Z88, Sir Clive Sinclair's excellent portable computer (and it really is good). The BASIC is copyright 1987, which is when the Z88 was released, so I wonder if it was commissioned for the Z88?

  • @Soruk42

    @Soruk42

    7 ай бұрын

    His BBC BASIC (Z80) was also used on the Acorn Z80 second processor for the BBC Micro, which could be run in ROM (so boot to Z80 BASIC) or loaded in as a CP/M application.

  • @mewintle

    @mewintle

    7 ай бұрын

    I have my original Z-88 from when I was 20 y/o. And the assembly language book for it. It was pretty cool, but the keyboard made it too hard to type in software for me to be able to use it for more than curiosity. It was literally a great doorstop for my bedroom door.

  • @st3ddyman
    @st3ddyman7 ай бұрын

    BBC Basic supports inline assembly language.

  • @nedmerrill5705
    @nedmerrill57052 ай бұрын

    Did a lot of Basic and Z80 assembly programming on a TRS80 back in the day. This sounds like fun to me. I'll be getting one.

  • @geowar20
    @geowar207 ай бұрын

    The Agon light uses an 18 MHz eZ80F92. I have a SBC that used the 50 MHz eZ80F91 that’s 2.78 times faster. There are also the Min-ez and eZ-Tiny that use the 50 MHz parts. Oh, and the eZ80F91 is also superscalar with a 3x performance boost over the F92… effectively a 150 MHz speed. There are rumors about an Agon heavy using the F91 part also.

  • @bazodee2
    @bazodee27 ай бұрын

    Just the thought of having to stand infront of computer longer than a minute or two makes my bad knees ache.

  • @RevellingTerror
    @RevellingTerror7 ай бұрын

    Hi, great interesting video, particularly your reference to the Amstrad CPC range of machines, I was a CPC games programmer in the 80's working on titles such as Rambo, International Karate, Daley Thompson's Supertest, Spy Hunter, Zaxxon and more. If you're interested I could elaborate on some of the techniques we used on the CPC to squeeze the most speed from the Z80 and how we used interrupts to enable multiple graphic resolutions to be displayed within single frames... thanks.

  • @NoelsRetroLab

    @NoelsRetroLab

    7 ай бұрын

    I cut my teeth on the Amstrad CPC, playing and cracking a lot of those games (sorry! 😃) and I would absolutely love to poke your brain about it sometime. Can you drop me an email in my contact on the KZread page or a message on Discord/Twitter? Thanks!

  • @tomiluukkonen4035
    @tomiluukkonen40357 ай бұрын

    Found about Agon almost a year ago and concept itself is brilliant. But only 6-bit colours by default still puzzles me. Even with fixed-palette 8-bit (256c) it would be SO much easier to port old games from 8-bit era? And Agon badly needs support for USB-keyboards and hdmi-output. I still use PS/2-kb but I'm old and luckily still have those around. Where is Basic-compiler for Agon - that would make a huge difference (2-5*speedup) when porting 80's homemade programs?

  • @synchronuse

    @synchronuse

    7 ай бұрын

    You can buy USB - PS/2 Adapters for keyboards

  • @dieSpinnt
    @dieSpinnt7 ай бұрын

    Hardware-Sharing the access to the SD-Card between the ez80 and ESP32 would be absolutely cool! Imagine the possibilities of the co-processor (wrong term ... its a GPU) loading resources through an API without any work for the CPU. BTW there is also SRAM with dual ports on the market that could be shared between ez80 RAM and ESP32 PSRAM in static mode. That would be a BEAST! Hehehe

  • @jeromecollobert
    @jeromecollobert7 ай бұрын

    I've one olimex version myself and i'm totally agree with your conclusion. I'm very interested about new highspeed 8bit computer or gaming console and unfortunately totally disapointed by the experimental aspect of VDP. I'm not the target 😢

  • @ProDigit80
    @ProDigit807 ай бұрын

    I would love to see a Fast/impulse/scream Tracker program run on this, using 4 to 8 channels and small samples (sawtooth, noise, sine, triangle, or a mix of any of them), and maybe some effects like reverb, echo, distortion, fuzz, buzz, EQ, and a few others..)

  • @4bits4e47
    @4bits4e477 ай бұрын

    A valuable learning tool for those with insatiable curiosity and a great deal of time and patience. I achieved much of the same learning of BBC Basic using an RPi running RISC5 OS. Great review!

  • @wishusknight3009

    @wishusknight3009

    7 ай бұрын

    The ESP32 also ensures that some of what you learn can be transferred to other projects. That was a great design choice.

  • @Optimus6128
    @Optimus61287 ай бұрын

    It's funny that I must have been watching Bernando somewhere in a totally different space, maybe in theories of everything or other podcast doing philosophical discussions about science and consciousness, then in my more familiar space I watch this video, I am like "nice device, but have I seen this guy before?". Haha, it's the same Bernando doing retro hacks!!! Wow, impressed.

  • @thebyteattic

    @thebyteattic

    7 ай бұрын

    😄👍

  • @Optimus6128

    @Optimus6128

    7 ай бұрын

    @@thebyteatticOh wow, hi there! Interesting device btw, I am planning to buy one at some point (probably the console release), curious to get me coding into some ez80 based platform sooner or later as I have previous experience with z80 and I am curious.

  • @rileyfaelan
    @rileyfaelan7 ай бұрын

    IIRC, in the PC world, the AT keyboards, which had standard-size DIN connectors, had the same signals as PS/2 in them, so there were simple PS/2-AT adapters, and creating one from scratch would also be as easy as taking one connector of each sort and wiring them up correctly. The earlier XT keyboards also used DIN connectors, but a different signalling protocol, so if one wanted to make a converter, something like Arduino Nano would come in handy.

  • @crystalsheep1434
    @crystalsheep14347 ай бұрын

    Cool the eZ80 is the same chip as the one un the TI-84 plus CE. I was thinking that someone should make a portable pocket computer with this chip and this is a good starting point for that

  • @spudhead169
    @spudhead1697 ай бұрын

    Noel, your personal opinion is exactly what I come here for.

  • @tohaason
    @tohaason5 ай бұрын

    Interesting. I've had an eZ80F92 development board (from Zilog) laying around for ages, but I haven't got around to do anything with it. I went and ordered the Olimex variant from the Pi Hut.

  • @jeffrowe6004
    @jeffrowe60043 ай бұрын

    lol, had to laugh when you mentioned turning off the pc and retyping the program when you was talking about saving on the sd card. I learned to program on a Vic 20 because I had to retype games from Compute magazines so many times..

  • @charlesspringer4709
    @charlesspringer47097 ай бұрын

    Here is a video tip. When you are holding the item you are talking about, wave it around wildly so we can not see it. I almost got a look at it, so you are not waving it enough! Anyway, you can buy 65C02 chips rated 14MHz that will run at 20MHz.

  • @mewintle

    @mewintle

    7 ай бұрын

    Lol

  • @landtimforgot
    @landtimforgot2 ай бұрын

    As well as the Z80 second processor and Z88, BBC Basic was available for the Z80 based Tatung Einstein.

  • @agw5425
    @agw54257 ай бұрын

    I would love a 486 DX 133 with the most compatible/capable graphics "card" for use with win 95 or 98 so all or at least most old games would run as if on original hardware. A couple of usb ports would be fine for external keyboard/mouse, fdd and cd drives as long as it can boot from at least one of them. A new "old" pc that is complete and ready to run with only normal setup like the os and no additional drivers required would be worth much to manny. I use a thin client as a retro pc for win 98 today but there are issues with the graphics being to "new" and not compatible with many old games. A "old" pc in that format but with compatible hardware would be a dream come true, especially if it can be made at raspberry pi price levels. Can a 486 cpu and wodo 3d (or similar)graphics be made with modern hardware without breaking the bank even?

  • @ryanyoder7573

    @ryanyoder7573

    7 ай бұрын

    Windows 95 really needs a Pentium with 16MB RAM. I built and sold computers when 95 launched and did so many Pentium 90 upgrades it was nuts.

  • @paulstubbs7678
    @paulstubbs76787 ай бұрын

    A nice little computer, Using a USB 'A' for the power in, well that's a bit weird. I'd probably swap that out. HDMI, is unfortunately a propriety standard, you have to sign up with them $$$$ to use it. You said you had some DIN connector keyboards, but no PS2, well (apart from the very early PC5150 & XT) they are the same thing, just a different plug, you can just use an adapter, or cut off the plug and fit a mini-din, or wire a full size DIN plug up to the Agon pcb.

  • @tarzankom
    @tarzankom7 ай бұрын

    This reminds me a little bit of the Apple-1. It was a computer with a computation area, and a separate terminal to handle display. This sounds similar.

  • @0LoneTech

    @0LoneTech

    7 ай бұрын

    The Apple 1 had a hardware terminal built with discrete components, quite a neat design you can grok. This has a separate computer over an order of magnitude faster and larger. It would have been easier to run BBC BASIC for SDL or Brandy directly in it.

  • @RetroHoo
    @RetroHoo7 ай бұрын

    Hey! Locomotive Basic was good too 😅 Certainly compared to what you got on the Commodore! I actually learned to program on my Schneider/Amstrad 6128 with green screen in 1991 😊

  • @another3997

    @another3997

    7 ай бұрын

    Just about ANY Basic on any other machine was better than the version on the C64. Even the Sinclair ZX81 version had graphics commands built in. 😂

  • @RetroHoo

    @RetroHoo

    7 ай бұрын

    I can't really argue with that 😅. I was always very impressed by Locomotive, but yeah, it didn't have functions/subroutines

  • @Kimdino1
    @Kimdino12 ай бұрын

    This Re-writable architecture thing - that's how the Sinclair computers were built. Clive Sinclair did it for cost reasons. At the time hardware was expensive, while software, once written, was free. He had a damned good processor (for the time) so he decided to let it do a lot of the work, There was a bit of hardware help from his ULA but this could easily be paged a for RAM with your own software, or hardware). Thus I had my ZX81 running high(er) definition graphics., albeit veeerrry slowly. And my Spectrum running, with two 5" floppy drives, as a full CP/M 2.2 system. Though I must admit that there was a lot of software 'borrowed' from a Pied Piper. Many people were very scathing of the Spectrum due to it lack of a dedicated hardware sound etc. but to me this was its beauty. It meant that it could be made into anything you wanted. The only limitation was that one lone CPU had to do ALL the work. At that time I had never thought of slave processors. But back to the point - that Agon IS replicating a classic 8 bit computer. It's just that I would probably have used another Speccy at the time as the ESP32 wasn't not available back then.

  • @pandacongolais
    @pandacongolais7 ай бұрын

    Fun and original computer you got there ! May be another use for this board is evaluation/development, with product development purpose. I don't know about modern Z80 CPU/MCU use, but since many Chinese product are still using 8051 (or 8051 core based) MCUs, more than you would suspect, why not use Z80 based ones too ? Question : at 13:50, you wrote that the speed of the serial connection is 1 152 000. Is this a typo, because the usual "confortable" value is 115 200 ? Or is it the actual speed, which would be justified by all the data the serial link has to handle ?

  • @AndrewHelgeCox

    @AndrewHelgeCox

    7 ай бұрын

    I believe it's in the megabit range.

  • @David-lk1hq

    @David-lk1hq

    7 ай бұрын

    I believe 1,152,000 is the correct number - according to the manual github.com/TheByteAttic/AgonORIGINS/blob/main/Agon%20light%20ORIGINS%20Manual.pdf

  • @kazriko
    @kazriko7 ай бұрын

    This isn't the fastest 8-bit computer I've seen. The chips from Rabbit Semiconductor (rabbit 2000/3000) are near z180 compatible and run over 30mhz. The rabbit 6000 series are 200mhz, but I haven't actually used one so I don't know if those are still 8-bit. There's no basic environment for them yet though. You usually program them with their own C variant.

  • @squirrelarmor
    @squirrelarmor5 ай бұрын

    I learned assembly on an ez80 via the TI-84 Plus CE. Pretty sweet chip.

  • @LordOfNihil
    @LordOfNihil7 ай бұрын

    i kind of have a problem with the requirements for a retro-ish keyboard and monitor. the fpga rout i think would have been better in that regard. as it could have supported usb, hdmi/dp, perhaps some modern networking, and still have enough space to run a simple soft processor to handle other tasks. if that wasn't enough you could reconfigure it to your own needs and provide a header so you could spin a custom daughter board for whatever additional interfaces you may need. this also gives it more educational value for people who want to do electronics or architecture design. even if it does tick up the price point significantly.

  • @another3997

    @another3997

    7 ай бұрын

    By the time you've added all that, you might as well by a Raspberry Pi or similar. There comes a point where everything is modern except the CPU itself, and yet it will cost more money and perform worse than other products. HDMI has to be licensed, so that's understandably missing. Communications can be handled over GPIO if you wanted. This board is for tinkering, experimenting and having fun playing around. If you want a 'complete' solution, just buy an old PC... they have everything built in, they're cheap, powerful and you can program in BASIC or just emulate any 8 bit computer you want.

  • @LordOfNihil

    @LordOfNihil

    7 ай бұрын

    @@another3997 if you start using a raspberry pi, you might as well just use a pc. the benefit of these low spec boards running very close to the bare metal is that its fully comprehensible. every subsystem can be understood in detail by a single individual. pi and pc both go way beyond that. on the other hand the esp32 can run circles around the "main" processor. using this to then emulate all the hardware you need. at that point why do we have a main processor at all? an fpga can be the hardware, an actual extension of the data bus and function similar to retro hardware while providing quite a bit of extensibility.

  • @MadsonOnTheWeb
    @MadsonOnTheWeb7 ай бұрын

    That's great. z80, most of those newer computers I've been seeing are some sort of 6502. Not gonna lie, I'm kinda tired of those. I wanted to see z80 or even something more like 8088 or even 68k (but I guess those last ones aren't available anymore).

  • @jnharton

    @jnharton

    7 ай бұрын

    There are plenty of 68000 family CPUs kicking around in the wild, although the official support chips might be hard to find.

  • @MadsonOnTheWeb

    @MadsonOnTheWeb

    7 ай бұрын

    @@jnharton So, I see this z80 is kinda of a microcontroller and I know that coldfire is based on 68k. But not sure about pricing.

  • @kc9scott

    @kc9scott

    7 ай бұрын

    I’ve long thought that a great niche would be a computer with an 8-bit data bus (and truly 8-bit code) but 24-bit linear addressing (maybe upgradable to 32-bit). I’m initially from the Apple II world, and one of the obvious learnings from using a 6502 is that the stack pointer really needs ability to access the entire memory. A few years later, the 65C816 came out, and it was a disappointment, since has 24-bit addresses, but only a 16-bit stack pointer. So the eZ80 seems like it might fit this niche. Is it in fact the first processor to do this, after all these years?

  • @johnm2012

    @johnm2012

    7 ай бұрын

    Do a web search for "V20 MBC" and/or "68k MBC". You might like what you find.

  • @youreale
    @youreale7 ай бұрын

    I agree that using the ESP32 is like cheating a bit (no pun intended);

  • @col8981
    @col89817 ай бұрын

    A lot of the commands in BBC basic could be abbreviated when typing in a listing e.g. P. = PRINT , LO. = LOAD they are expanded when you LIST (LI.)

  • @marcdraco2189

    @marcdraco2189

    7 ай бұрын

    I didn't know that - was that option always there or added in later versions. I don't have my original Model B any more.

  • @johnm2012

    @johnm2012

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@marcdraco2189It was there from the beginning. OS commands, issued from BASIC or any other language by preceding them with an asterisk, could also be abbreviated. The dictionary was ordered in such a way that the ultimate abbreviation *. (star dot) expanded to *CAT which was similar to DIR in DOS or ls in UNIX.

  • @marcdraco2189

    @marcdraco2189

    7 ай бұрын

    @@johnm2012 Well damn! In all the years I spent writing code in BeeBeeCee BASIC too. I could have forgotten of course, it's been a few decades but more likely I missed that bit in the manual! :)

  • @johnm2012

    @johnm2012

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@marcdraco2189The included manual was the spiral bound Welcome Guide. It's available as a pdf online if you want to check for yourself.

  • @marcdraco2189

    @marcdraco2189

    7 ай бұрын

    @@johnm2012 I had one. I learned how to program using it. But for “reasons” I don’t remember that. Of course false memories are telling me I DID do that but I don’t know if I should believe them any more. The only one I recall shortening was REN. Because that would be a lot to type.

  • @PeBoVision
    @PeBoVision7 ай бұрын

    Forgive me if this question reflects my inherent stupidity, but having a customizable VDP, does the Agon-light support sprites out of the box in BASIC (I'm sure that the speed of the systems makes them superfluous) or can sprite functions be implemented by the user within the VDP ? Again with all of the information you have provided on the ESP32, I hope this is not a dumb question but I really look at this as a BASIC box with unlimited potential for high-evel language programmers with direct low-level support. Regardless, I look forward to seeing where this goes.

  • @NoelsRetroLab

    @NoelsRetroLab

    7 ай бұрын

    Not a dumb question at all! Yes, it does support an implementation of sprites. And the cool thing is that if someone wanted to, they could implement something pretty different.

  • @PeBoVision

    @PeBoVision

    7 ай бұрын

    @@NoelsRetroLab Switching between the Commodore, Texas Instruments and Atari sprite implementations (PM graphics for the latter) would be SOOO much fun. Giant multi-coloured sprites that you could set in motion, while your code moves onto more important things!!! And at the speed of this things collison detection would be flawless!! This really is exciting. Thanks (as always) for the video.

  • @PeBoVision

    @PeBoVision

    7 ай бұрын

    @@NoelsRetroLab It sounds like the machine I always dreamed of back when I dreamed of "THE" machine. It will certainly be a community worth watching.

  • @Mrcometo
    @Mrcometo7 ай бұрын

    Great show! 8:30 I miss the Grundy NewBrain

  • @NoelsRetroLab

    @NoelsRetroLab

    7 ай бұрын

    That was actually a TI-99/4A. I never had the pleasure to tinker with a NewBrain. Some day...

  • @MagnaRyuuDesigns
    @MagnaRyuuDesigns6 ай бұрын

    the eZ80 is pretty versatile. It's used in newer Texas Instruments Calculators as well.

  • @gerrytemple5044
    @gerrytemple50443 ай бұрын

    Very interesting little thing! I bought a Colour Maximite 2 for 110$, which is 32 bit and comes with a fantastic MM-Basic and a solid metal case. It also has higher resolution graphics with plenty more colours. Would be great to see a comparison. Cheers, great fun! 👍

  • @perfectionbox
    @perfectionbox7 ай бұрын

    Neat. So if e.g. I wanted it to emulate a TRS-80 Model III or a CoCo, the video system could be reprogrammed to do that?

  • @thebyteattic

    @thebyteattic

    7 ай бұрын

    Probably, as someone already did MSX emulation on it!

  • @andyleighton3616

    @andyleighton3616

    7 ай бұрын

    A CoCo would be out that used a 6809e as the processor - not a Z80. A TRS-80 Model III to some extent - that used memory mapped graphcs (so you could peek and poke straight into video ram), the way the MOS/VDP works is sending commands like set this pixel, or draw a line from here to there - so anything low level probably wouldn't work. But you could probably get some high level BASIC stuff working and I guess someone could port TRDOS. The alternative is to write an emulator that works entirely on the VDP chip and which doesn't use the main RAM or EZ80 processor. As someone else mentioned MSX - that is a little different as that had a TMS9918 chip to handle the graphics and the video graphics were not in the main RAM (you used VPOKE and VPEEK). Later MSX models had better video display chips - the TMS9938 and TMS9958. As you can probably guess that makes it much cleaner to emulate - the VDP code emulates what the TMS9918 did in terms of graphics.

  • @sentientechnologyworldwide
    @sentientechnologyworldwide4 ай бұрын

    Hello Sir! Could this be used for SMS? Thanks

  • @BrainSlugs83
    @BrainSlugs837 ай бұрын

    I was researching modern Z80 equivalents a few years ago and stumbled on to the eZ80 series of chips; except for unpredicted branches, the added pipelining makes the CPU run another ~4x faster than a classic Z80 (if they were running at the same clock speed), and the eZ380 CPU can run up to ~200 MHz IIRC (which is insane, as it would be the equivalent of a 600 to 800 MHz classic Z80. The serial line audio / video isn't that bad if it has things like hardware sprites, samples, etc. -- Loading and setting things up might lag (or not), but at runtime, you wouldn't really notice. -- As for the "fake hardware" it's at least more real than the Commander X16 in that regard, as there are no FPGA defined devices. A microcontroller really does have a lot more real limitations than an FPGA...

  • @jnharton

    @jnharton

    7 ай бұрын

    I understand the desire to not use an FPGA instead of "real silicon", but people to seem to forget that custom silicon, customizable gate array chips, and various kinds of PLDs were used back then.

  • @Torbjorn.Lindgren

    @Torbjorn.Lindgren

    7 ай бұрын

    I agree that it's certainly not less "real" than a FPGA which is what the others use. And FPGA is WAY harder to develop for, and here he could bypass even most of that because FabGL for ESP32 already existed and does graphics, audio and PS/2 keyboard/mouse... He's mentioned possibly making an Agon Heavy later if it's stable enough to support a second version, there's a number of choices that ought to be compatible up to at least 50MHz (so more than 2.5x) and/or has way more IO lines.

  • @shanehebert396

    @shanehebert396

    7 ай бұрын

    The FPGA in the X16 is basically just a graphics card, which even some 8-bit systems in the 80s had specialized graphics hardware to handle sprites and such (not to mention the 16-bit days with the Amiga's graphics). It's actually potentially *less* capable than the 'graphics processor' in the Agon Light since the VDP is an ESP32 processor... just a straight up computer on its own running at 240MHz. You can even use just it and ignore the eZ80 side of it ;)

  • @paulie-g

    @paulie-g

    7 ай бұрын

    In terms of 'real', FPGA is more real because it is real hardware, except redefinable. FPGAs are often used to replace ULA chips which were a predecessor technology to FPGA. Personally, I don't get the FPGA hate. This same Zilog ez80 processor can be supplied as a core (and presumably softcore for FPGA). It's just an implementation detail and a way for regular humans to design our own hardware without committing six figures to tape out and fab a chip. If you think a microcontroller 'imposes more restrictions', you've never designed in Verilog or RTL. It's an order of magnitude more difficult. That particular microcontroller already has IP cores on-chip implemented to do a lot of the difficult video bits like RGB565, that's why it was chosen.

  • @another3997

    @another3997

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@shanehebert396Most 8 bit micros had custom or dedicated hardware for displaying graphics. In that sense, modern PCs amd consoles are no different... GPUs are custom parts with standardised APIs. An FPGA can be a full computer too, the whole Commander X16 could be fitted on an FPGA for far less cost than the current version. I doubt the Agon 2 could be made cheaper. Horses for courses... buy whichever system(s) suit you best. 🙂

  • @SuperHaunts
    @SuperHaunts6 ай бұрын

    I think I'll get one to learn on, then buy a second and make it more modern usb friendly, especially keyboard wise

  • @blarghblargh
    @blarghblargh7 ай бұрын

    Maybe im confused, but is there a "default" vdp implementation? Or is it always some sort of blank slate once you get down to the assembly level?

  • @NoelsRetroLab

    @NoelsRetroLab

    7 ай бұрын

    Yes, there is. The one I showed running BBC BASIC and any of the demos. And you can always start tweaking it from that code.

  • @andyleighton3616

    @andyleighton3616

    7 ай бұрын

    Yeah by default there is VDP, MOS and Basic. The version of VDP and MOS sort of have to be kept in sync (although I guess you could write new VDP extensions as long as you keep the existing VDP API the same). Without any VDP code - it just doesn't work - it wouldn't know how to output anything to the screen, or how to read the keyboard etc.

  • @douro20
    @douro207 ай бұрын

    There is MSX support in the works. MSX-DOS already runs on it using a firmware level compatibility layer.

  • @alk3myst
    @alk3myst5 ай бұрын

    Great Video! Don't need this right now, but I so want to buy one.

  • @GenialHarryGrout
    @GenialHarryGrout7 ай бұрын

    I used Sinclai QL SuperBASIC which didn't need lines numbers for subroutines. I never programmed in BBC Basic so would have to brush up on that

  • @rog2224

    @rog2224

    7 ай бұрын

    BBC BASIC V, which is part of RISCOS, doesn't need line numbers, if memory serves. The OS is a little idiosyncratic, but I believe it can be configured to boot directly into BASIC on RPi, if you're interested in tinkering on something that might feel a little closer to SuperBASIC. BBC BASIC on BBC B/Electron kit was my fourth BASIC dialect - ZX81, TI BASIC, MS BASIC on Apple IIe, and then BBC BASIC, so line numbers are sort of ingrained for me.

  • @GenialHarryGrout

    @GenialHarryGrout

    7 ай бұрын

    @@rog2224 I learnt to program in the early 1970's and that was BASIC so when home computers became a thing in the late 70's early 80's then I was ready has soon as I set up my computer. IMy first home computer was a ZX81 followed by a Dragon32 then the QL so line numbering was how I was taught and how used while programming in that language. I only stop using line numbers when I became a developer for a software house who didn't use BASIC.

  • @KipIngram
    @KipIngram5 ай бұрын

    Holy cow - I was only familiar with Kastrup via his philosophy work; had no idea he was an online hardware dude too.

  • @djafk
    @djafk7 ай бұрын

    6:25 Ha, basicA was so awesome back then (dos 3.1ish?). Line numbers made it a puzzle challenge to debug lol!

  • @duncanwalduck7715
    @duncanwalduck77152 ай бұрын

    I wonder if bitluni's ESP-32 sprite engine would fold easily into the GPU-sonic-I/O "co-processor" here - on top of what it already does - or if it's just tasked with too many additional small things in this system.

  • @TalmidAndy
    @TalmidAndy2 ай бұрын

    While I don't have the appropriate skill set I would love to see the ability to connect retro hardware/software to the Agon, such as the weather satellite system for the BBC computer.

  • @forbiddenera
    @forbiddenera7 ай бұрын

    Man..I thought I was bad for using an intellimouse for farrrr too long..crazy to see one still being someones main mouse

  • @proteque
    @proteque7 ай бұрын

    interesting computer. it is getting hard to choose which project to jump on :)

  • @mewintle

    @mewintle

    7 ай бұрын

    Ikr‽

  • @talideon
    @talideon7 ай бұрын

    Locomotive BASIC is actually partly inspired by BBC BASIC, and as BASICs go, they're both relatively fast interpreters, leaps and bounds beyond Microsoft BASICs and Sinclair BASIC. The killer feature though, if you want speed, is that BBC BASIC is effectively a macro assembler!

  • @Booruvcheek

    @Booruvcheek

    7 ай бұрын

    I could not stand Sinclair BASIC because of the stupid "can't just type the keyword, must find the key combo" thing.

  • @another3997

    @another3997

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@Booruvcheek Later Spectrums didn't use that system, so you wouldn't have a problem. The keyword system itself was OK once you got used to the layout, even if the physical keyboards left a lot to be desired. They were built down to a price that made them affordable, that involved making compromises. Otherwise a lot of people wouldn't have got a computer, or even ended up with one of the many dismal failures that came and went almost overnight.

  • @Booruvcheek

    @Booruvcheek

    7 ай бұрын

    @@another3997 I understand the desire to cut the cost, I even understand that having keywords as special symbols / characters simplifies the job of Basic interpreter significantly. However, by the time I got my Spectrum clone in 1990 (being a kid in the USSR during its last days you don't get an original ZX Spectrum, unless you're a son of a party elite), I've had some experience with IBM PC clones, and the difference was night and day. I was pretty proficient with QWERTY keyboard already, and having to look up keywords instead of just typing them in was infuriating. On a tangent, every Soviet "home computer" at the time had JCUKEN keyboard ( en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JCUKEN?useskin=vector#Latin_JCUKEN ), which was also a dealbreaker for me.

  • @prozacgodretro
    @prozacgodretro7 ай бұрын

    Is the EZ80 and Z180 similar? or possible the same or something?

  • @radekhn

    @radekhn

    7 ай бұрын

    The cpu core is actually Z180. So you can see in the eZ80 instruction set few one from Z180. If I remember correctly it can multiply. However the Z180 MMU is not there.

  • @Bianchi77
    @Bianchi773 ай бұрын

    Nice video, thanks:)

  • @awilliams1701
    @awilliams17017 ай бұрын

    The 6502 is faster than the Z80 by about 3 times. That means the commander 16 is actually still faster in performance. I believe it's 8mhz that's about a 21 mhz z80 equivalent. It's not a huge difference, but still

  • @awilliams1701

    @awilliams1701

    7 ай бұрын

    I was actually curious so I checked out your benchmark page. Neither this nor the commander x16 are mentioned on it. lol And in the video you didn't give the time. But I'd say maybe 5 seconds. I would expect them to be close though...or not. You do give it later in the video as 1.8 seconds. So I was off. But I would expect the CX16 to be in that ball park.

  • @NoelsRetroLab

    @NoelsRetroLab

    7 ай бұрын

    Yes, the Agon Light was 1.8 seconds. I'll update the chart. I'm genuinely curious how the X16 performs there (not like this is a good benchmark of all-around performance). If you have one and you can run it, let me know. The eZ80 is pipelined, so that probably accounts for even extra performance over a fast 6502 (just guessing).

  • @awilliams1701

    @awilliams1701

    7 ай бұрын

    ok with those enhancements it might actually be able to compete. I'd be curious for a comparison.

  • @awilliams1701

    @awilliams1701

    7 ай бұрын

    @@NoelsRetroLab I tend to live comment so I frequently say things that are updated later in the video. lol yeah that pipeline enhancement might make up the 3x difference. I don't though. I'm on the wait and see. I can't afford it at the moment after dropping $10k on a new AC unit. and dog only knows how much to fix my roof. sigh..... And besides I haven't even had time for my C64 in a while.

  • @geowar20

    @geowar20

    7 ай бұрын

    Regardless of the CPU clock speeds the 6502 with only one accumulator and two index registers (8-bits each) spends much more time marshaling data to and from memory than the Z80 with one 8-bit accumulator and three 16-bit registers and two 16-bit index registers. I program both in assembly and find the 6502 much more restrictive.

  • @Kimdino1
    @Kimdino12 ай бұрын

    Does it expose the full Z80 bus? In a setup like this I would imagine that very little of the Z80s I/O space is used. And to have access to ALL that would be awesome. Direct, simple access to 8Mb of address space dedicated to hardware, and directly addressable at the lowest level. An dream beyond imagination for a roboticist.

  • @Ali-Britco
    @Ali-Britco7 ай бұрын

    Holy crap, funky stars! Thats my childhood right there!

  • @AndersNielsenAA
    @AndersNielsenAA4 ай бұрын

    I'd be happy to send you one of my 65uino's, no string attached :) It's certainly a much cheaper 8 bit computer but also has quite a bit less address space :D It's a computer designed to encourage programming 6502 assembly with pretty aggressive constraints - like programming for the Atari VCS/2600.

  • @WX4CB
    @WX4CB7 ай бұрын

    only thing i dont like is the usb power... why the heck they didnt use usbC is beyond me.

  • @cyul

    @cyul

    7 ай бұрын

    And a type A connector to boot. Mindboggling.

  • @vasilis23456
    @vasilis234563 ай бұрын

    Last semester I had a class where we programmed a video display processor to an FPGA in Verilog. Most people who implemented VDPs in their final projects ended up synthesizing a microcontroller onto the FPGA (Xilinx/AMD's Microblaze) and then programming the VDP in C. The reasoning behind doing this is that it takes 10+ minutes to synthesize a Verilog implementation while it takes 5 seconds to compile a C program. Bug fixing is much faster and easier on Microcontrollers, and Verilog simulation outputs are wavetables, it would be very hard to make a program that reads the HDMI traces and puts them in an emulated video window.

  • @MoosesValley
    @MoosesValley7 ай бұрын

    Turbo Pascal v3.x compatible would be a lot of fun on the Agon Light ...

  • @ricardog2165

    @ricardog2165

    7 ай бұрын

    There was a CP/M version so it sounds doable

  • @0LoneTech

    @0LoneTech

    7 ай бұрын

    FreePascal development version supports both the Z80 and Xtensa LX6 CPUs.

  • @Andrath
    @Andrath7 ай бұрын

    Didn't BBC BASIC have inline assembler support? I wonder if the Z80 port has that too.

  • @NoelsRetroLab

    @NoelsRetroLab

    7 ай бұрын

    I'm looking into it right now, and I think it did. So yes, technically you could use that for writing Z80 code. Neat!

  • @t3hav8r

    @t3hav8r

    7 ай бұрын

    @@NoelsRetroLab It has inline assembler for now only for 16-bit address space, but ADL (24-bit address space) version of both Basic and inline assembler is in works.

  • @rog2224

    @rog2224

    7 ай бұрын

    If you're familiar with the old two pass inline assembler of BBC BASIC on 6502, then you'll be comfortable with the Russell version.

  • @fred-9929

    @fred-9929

    7 ай бұрын

    @@NoelsRetroLab there is even a port of this BBC basic for the Amstrad CPC, with the inline assembler!

  • @EnglishMike

    @EnglishMike

    7 ай бұрын

    That was the first thing I thought of when he mentioned it was BBC Basic. I had a BBC Micro back in the 1980s and writing 6502 assembler code was a cinch, and extremely useful for hacking the hardware and operating system, as well as accelerating performance critical parts of your BASIC program. It's also a great way to learn assembler code, because you don't have to worry about getting used to building and running machine code with a completely different set of tools.

  • @etmax1
    @etmax17 ай бұрын

    One thing about quoting the clock speed, I'd prefer that was never mentioned as it has almost zero relevance. What is way more important is the average instruction cycle time, as for example the original Z80 had something like 10 or more (can't remember exact numbers) clock cycles per instruction meaning that if you compared it to an ATmega which has an average 1-2 clock cycles per instruction so a 4MHz Z80 runs at ~0.4MHz (or slower) and an ATmega at 4MHz runs at 4 MHz or 10 times faster for the same crystal Frequency.

  • @NoelsRetroLab

    @NoelsRetroLab

    7 ай бұрын

    The Z80 has a variable number of clock cycles per instruction (some of them are just a couple), but the eZ80 has extra pipelining, so I think they reduced that by quite a lot. But yes, the clock frequency only makes sense when comparing it to the same architecture, not to a different CPU.

  • @rog2224
    @rog22247 ай бұрын

    I quite like the AgonLight2 , but, as mentioned elsewhere, the Olimex incarnation of the board is a trifle eccentric, having PS2 implemented through a USB-A. I got around it by using a 'dumb' USB to PS2 dongle, and then a native PS2 keyboard (all sourced via Amazon UK, I believe my keyboard shipped from Germany). A 'problem' with both the OG and Olimex versions is that MODE 2 (the 'high colour' mode) is idiosyncratic enough on the the VDP 1.03 version that not all VGA 'compatible' TVs will handle it - I got a cheap compact VGA to HDMI converter that works from Amazon UK, that resolved the issue (for me, not all converters are created equal, I understand). I got the device since it allows me to tinker with projects like I did on the BBC B at uni, the GPIO being very close, in spirit to the BBC User Port.

  • @another3997

    @another3997

    7 ай бұрын

    A Raspberry Pi will let you play with GPIO ports, and spiritually, it's the successor to the Beeb and later Acorn devices. Load up RiscOS, designed by Acorn specifically for their brand new ARM chips, you'll find it has a fully native implementation of BBC Basic, with support for GPIO.

  • @royloveday4350
    @royloveday43507 ай бұрын

    This might be the thing that replaces my desire for a next in the short term.

  • @blackterminal

    @blackterminal

    2 ай бұрын

    Next is so expensive.

  • @martinenglish6641
    @martinenglish66417 ай бұрын

    I will get this card to use as a PLC and see how it does. I now use Raspberry Pi boards to replace and upgrade industrial customers PLC's.

  • @AlistairGale
    @AlistairGale7 ай бұрын

    Why are we calling them 8 bit cpus, when clearly every useful mode is 16 bit?

  • @NoelsRetroLab

    @NoelsRetroLab

    7 ай бұрын

    Because the eZ80 can only read or write 8 bits at a time (the ESP32 is a different beast, but that's not playing the role of CPU).

  • @robqg
    @robqg7 ай бұрын

    Reminds me of the setup of the TI-84 calculator which had a normal calculator chip plus an Arm chip for running Python, connected over a serial or SPI bus. Ben Heck did an interesting video on it.

  • @juanantonio4955
    @juanantonio49557 ай бұрын

    Great Noel!!

  • @xav500011
    @xav5000117 ай бұрын

    BBC BASIC can do inline assembly code which is nice.

  • @NoelsRetroLab

    @NoelsRetroLab

    7 ай бұрын

    Yes! I only realized that today when someone else mentioned it. And the port of BBC Basic lets you do it in Z80 assembly, so yay!

  • @Barnardrab
    @Barnardrab2 ай бұрын

    Questions: 1) Would it have been possible for them to install a DisplayPort in addition to the VGA? 2) What's the best gaming performance you could get out of it? Could it top the Super Nintendo? Support 2D and 3D vector graphics? I think squeezing the full potential performance out of 8-bit CPUs is an intriguing concept. The advantage that you get with 8-bit CPUs is that they are smaller, cheaper and use little power. They are ideal for systems that do not require significant computing resources.

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