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#tms7000 β€” Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #tms7000, aggregated by home.social.

  1. I just started using Dosbox for the first time ever, on Linux. That's because I finally found a copy of the PC (DOS) version of the Texas Instruments asm7 assembler for the TMS7000. Unfortunately I have not found the other tools that would have originally accompanied the assembler, such as the linker. Still, it will be useful as a sanity check on my newly written TMS7000 disassembler.
    #tms7000 #assembler #disassembler #retrocomputing

  2. I just started using Dosbox for the first time ever, on Linux. That's because I finally found a copy of the PC (DOS) version of the Texas Instruments asm7 assembler for the TMS7000. Unfortunately I have not found the other tools that would have originally accompanied the assembler, such as the linker. Still, it will be useful as a sanity check on my newly written TMS7000 disassembler.
    #tms7000 #assembler #disassembler #retrocomputing

  3. I just started using Dosbox for the first time ever, on Linux. That's because I finally found a copy of the PC (DOS) version of the Texas Instruments asm7 assembler for the TMS7000. Unfortunately I have not found the other tools that would have originally accompanied the assembler, such as the linker. Still, it will be useful as a sanity check on my newly written TMS7000 disassembler.
    #tms7000 #assembler #disassembler #retrocomputing

  4. I just started using Dosbox for the first time ever, on Linux. That's because I finally found a copy of the PC (DOS) version of the Texas Instruments asm7 assembler for the TMS7000. Unfortunately I have not found the other tools that would have originally accompanied the assembler, such as the linker. Still, it will be useful as a sanity check on my newly written TMS7000 disassembler.
    #tms7000 #assembler #disassembler #retrocomputing

  5. I just started using Dosbox for the first time ever, on Linux. That's because I finally found a copy of the PC (DOS) version of the Texas Instruments asm7 assembler for the TMS7000. Unfortunately I have not found the other tools that would have originally accompanied the assembler, such as the linker. Still, it will be useful as a sanity check on my newly written TMS7000 disassembler.
    #tms7000 #assembler #disassembler #retrocomputing

  6. I fixed a few bugs in my TMS7000 disassembler (though there are many more), and added a brief description of the format of the XML definitions file that it can use.
    #tms7000 #disassembler #retrocomputing

  7. I fixed a few bugs in my TMS7000 disassembler (though there are many more), and added a brief description of the format of the XML definitions file that it can use.
    #tms7000 #disassembler #retrocomputing

  8. I fixed a few bugs in my TMS7000 disassembler (though there are many more), and added a brief description of the format of the XML definitions file that it can use.
    #tms7000 #disassembler #retrocomputing

  9. I fixed a few bugs in my TMS7000 disassembler (though there are many more), and added a brief description of the format of the XML definitions file that it can use.
    #tms7000 #disassembler #retrocomputing

  10. I fixed a few bugs in my TMS7000 disassembler (though there are many more), and added a brief description of the format of the XML definitions file that it can use.
    #tms7000 #disassembler #retrocomputing

  11. My TMS7000 disassembler is now minimally functional, and very minimally documented, but I've made a git repository publicly available on Codeberg:
    codeberg.org/brouhaha/tms7000
    I don't promise that anything works correctly, or that the output can be assembled back to the original binary. That is the intention, but as the assembler is not yet ready, I can't yet test that.
    #TMS7000 #disassembler #retrocomputing

  12. My TMS7000 disassembler is now minimally functional, and very minimally documented, but I've made a git repository publicly available on Codeberg:
    codeberg.org/brouhaha/tms7000
    I don't promise that anything works correctly, or that the output can be assembled back to the original binary. That is the intention, but as the assembler is not yet ready, I can't yet test that.
    #TMS7000 #disassembler #retrocomputing

  13. My TMS7000 disassembler is now minimally functional, and very minimally documented, but I've made a git repository publicly available on Codeberg:
    codeberg.org/brouhaha/tms7000
    I don't promise that anything works correctly, or that the output can be assembled back to the original binary. That is the intention, but as the assembler is not yet ready, I can't yet test that.
    #TMS7000 #disassembler #retrocomputing

  14. My TMS7000 disassembler is now minimally functional, and very minimally documented, but I've made a git repository publicly available on Codeberg:
    codeberg.org/brouhaha/tms7000
    I don't promise that anything works correctly, or that the output can be assembled back to the original binary. That is the intention, but as the assembler is not yet ready, I can't yet test that.
    #TMS7000 #disassembler #retrocomputing

  15. My TMS7000 disassembler is now minimally functional, and very minimally documented, but I've made a git repository publicly available on Codeberg:
    codeberg.org/brouhaha/tms7000
    I don't promise that anything works correctly, or that the output can be assembled back to the original binary. That is the intention, but as the assembler is not yet ready, I can't yet test that.
    #TMS7000 #disassembler #retrocomputing