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You can do a lot with 12 kilobytes. Most 2600 games fit into 2, 4, or 8 kB ROMs. Even Galaxian for the NES only used 8 kB.
The real problem is the “processor”. 4 kHz is slower than the ENIAC. Certainly not fast enough for the vidya. Without dedicated video hardware, you’d need most of those cycles just to keep the display running.
Look by her ear, there’s a little display of pong. Or a power outlet.
Anything can run doom if you try hard enough
Some units with integrated generators have such a display, a positive value means that the unit is generating more that it draws, so a net 20 A or kW current/power outside, the reverse for negative.
Edited
She might need a Super FX-chip for that.
At a silky-smooth 60 frames per day.
Only if you add the extra vaccuum tubes that came in the wooden case we keep in the warehouse.
This is Brownie Bun we’re talking about. Fire is inevitable.
Well I mean TJ’s a huge nerd so of course he’s going to do research for nerd stuff.
I know, right? TJPones did some research for this.
@BarryFromMars
I have to wonder where that oil’s being pumped to. I’m imagining magnetic drum memory bearings. Do you suppose this computer spins the drum up with an electric motor, or is there a steam engine involved? Perhaps the computer runs on coal.
Just a myth. There was a famous case of a bug found causing a short in a computer, but the word “bug” to describe a computer error was already around before then. That’s why the story was notable, it was the first literal bug in a computer.
Check out this article.
Edited because: Fix link