This video amazed me of how simply it can be. There are a lot of videos out there that explains about the 6502 architecture and his instruction set, but this video is the best.
Unbelievable, simply amazing! All that work, all the time that went into researching those papers and websites out there, not to mention condensing the huge amount of information into that understandable presentation for such a small audience...! 👍👍
The 6502 was in the Super Nintendo? Where? It had a W65C816S compatible main 16Bit-CPU and a Sony-SPC700 sound chip. Do you mean that the W65C816S belongs to the family of 6502 processors? Cause that would be a correct statement. Or is there indeed an 6502 CPU in the SNES that I don't know about?
Whoever did the edit and crammed those wide angle shots in while the only visual thing of importance was happening on the projection screen must really brood deep hatred towards humanity.
This video amazed me of how simply it can be.
There are a lot of videos out there that explains about the 6502 architecture and his instruction set, but this video is the best.
Unbelievable, simply amazing! All that work, all the time that went into researching those papers and websites out there, not to mention condensing the huge amount of information into that understandable presentation for such a small audience...! 👍👍
And that is why we never went to the moon again. All engineers was reverse engineering the 6502. 😄
Amazing
The 6502 was in the Super Nintendo? Where? It had a W65C816S compatible main 16Bit-CPU and a Sony-SPC700 sound chip. Do you mean that the W65C816S belongs to the family of 6502 processors? Cause that would be a correct statement. Or is there indeed an 6502 CPU in the SNES that I don't know about?
It was in the NES.
Whoa!
Whoever did the edit and crammed those wide angle shots in while the only visual thing of importance was happening on the projection screen must really brood deep hatred towards humanity.
16:30 ...I rest my case
Rewrite the simulator in 6502 assembly.
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