On 11/23/2015 7:28 PM, William Maddox wrote:

The revived 2013 re-issue of Niklaus Wirth's Oberon system is a joy to behold.  
If you've never heard of Oberon before, it is a minimalistic education-oriented 
language and operating system designed after Wirth had taken a (second) 
sabattical at PARC in the 80's.

The new version runs on a custom RISC processor, implemented in an FPGA, instead of the 
NS3032 in the orginal Ceres workstations.   Originally, it required a Digilent 
"Spartan 3 Starter Kit" with a custom-built daughterboard providing a few 
additional connectors.  This board is no longer made, however, and no other FPGA 
development board appears to provide the 32-bit wide fast SRAM the Oberon CPU required.
Recently, a new board, the OberonStation,  has come onto the market that was 
designed specifically for Oberon, and will boot up Oberon 2013 out of the box.  
 It also looks like an excellent platform for other retro-style FPGA CPU 
designs that want to stay away from complex SDRAM controllers and the caches 
they like to feed.

My OberonStation arrived a couple of days ago, and it's really amazing to see 
what can be done with a hardware and software stack that is small enough to 
actually read and understand.
https://www.inf.ethz.ch/personal/wirth/

Do you have 5 volt I/O with the OberonStaion FPGA?
I was thinking of using it as general FPGA card.
Ben.

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