OMG. Can you imagine publishing Machine Code for Beginners today??
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OMG. Can you imagine publishing Machine Code for Beginners today??
@paco oh this cover design

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OMG. Can you imagine publishing Machine Code for Beginners today??
@paco I learnt Z80 assembly code first from instructions seen in listings, and then in Rodnay Zaks "Programming the Z80" book.
By that time we were learning more about thelow level basics, developing was more complex sometimes.
The level of abstraction of today gives a lot of flexibility, but at the same time astrays from the waste of resources: memory space, computing power, energy waste, even for terribly simple applications. -
@paco I had several of this series they are EXCELLENT every kid should learn how to assemble their code to hex it builds CHARACTER
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OMG. Can you imagine publishing Machine Code for Beginners today??
@paco
Nice. The closest to the machine programming I ever did was in assembler. Only a very little bit. Around 1987 -
OMG. Can you imagine publishing Machine Code for Beginners today??
RPOM (previously called Magpi) had a series on it, less than a year ago... They'll turn it into a book soon...
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OMG. Can you imagine publishing Machine Code for Beginners today??
@paco @mainframed767 we need more of this
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OMG. Can you imagine publishing Machine Code for Beginners today??
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Spent half my life on a 6502c but nobody wants to hear...
@bitchboss In THIS place? Everyone wants to hear about it!
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OMG. Can you imagine publishing Machine Code for Beginners today??
@paco when I got my Commodore PET 2001, the previous owner threw in a handwritten disassembly of the entire BASIC ROM. I learned a lot from that, and it kindled my interest in languages.
Unfortunately the 6502 is one of those modern integrated devices, so no peeking under the hood there. But when the PDP8 at school came with full schematics, and the whole thing turned out to be constructed using TTL chips I already knew, that too was weeks of exploration, fun and learning.
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@paco I had a similar book for the zx81 in the early 1980s!
@glasspusher @paco I was just thinking that too, not sure if I had this book or another one like it for the zx81 and later the spectrum
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Spent half my life on a 6502c but nobody wants to hear...
I was living in a Z80 at the time...
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I was living in a Z80 at the time...
@Walrus @bitchboss @paco
Shoot, got people living in a Z80 today. -
I was living in a Z80 at the time...
That was my father's adventure, the Sinclair ZX80. He still has it. He played with it a lot. He taught me how to program. When I was 18, I switched to an Atari 800XL, which I used as my breaker box in the Air Force. The first thing I programmed was a modification to the tape OS using machine code (with a self-written assembler) to increase the baud rate and record/read file name headers on cassette tapes. I mean, 500 baud and not knowing what track is on the tape is bananas...
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That was my father's adventure, the Sinclair ZX80. He still has it. He played with it a lot. He taught me how to program. When I was 18, I switched to an Atari 800XL, which I used as my breaker box in the Air Force. The first thing I programmed was a modification to the tape OS using machine code (with a self-written assembler) to increase the baud rate and record/read file name headers on cassette tapes. I mean, 500 baud and not knowing what track is on the tape is bananas...
@bitchboss Awesome!
@Walrus -
@Walrus @bitchboss @paco
Shoot, got people living in a Z80 today.Symplicity goes a long way...
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OMG. Can you imagine publishing Machine Code for Beginners today??
There are still one or two brave souls that program in Assembler


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R relay@relay.infosec.exchange shared this topic
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@paco Could you believe we had no problems expecting humans could write machine code, just for fun?

@gimulnautti @paco It is fun.
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@GreenYesScotland @paco This is how I learned Fortran.
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There are still one or two brave souls that program in Assembler


@simonzerafa My first, and perhaps most interesting, contribution to open source was assembly.
To play DOOM head to head over a modem, you needed a TSR that ran in DOS and basically translated a modem connection onto a network connection. My uni had these super fast digital modems (115K when the standard was 56K). The DOOM folks open-sourced this little serial adapter thingie. I rewrote some of the main loop in assembly to improve efficiency and emailed the patch.
Frankly, I was a 4th year student who had just taken his first assembly class. Itโs entirely likely that I didnโt improve it much at all.
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OMG. Can you imagine publishing Machine Code for Beginners today??
@paco Yes, but every page would start out โAsk your AI Assistant toโฆโ