Xref: utzoo comp.sources.wanted:10808 comp.sys.m68k:1483 Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!rutgers!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!wuarchive!udel!haven!mimsy!mojo!ronlee From: ronlee@eng.umd.edu (Ronald 'ronbo' Lee) Newsgroups: comp.sources.wanted,comp.sys.m68k Subject: Re: 68000 simulator wanted Keywords: 68000, simulator Message-ID: <1990Mar3.225206.3289@eng.umd.edu> Date: 3 Mar 90 22:52:06 GMT References: <266@menno.UUCP> <1990Feb22.185559.5347@newcastle.ac.uk> <30410@brunix.UUCP> Sender: news@eng.umd.edu (The News System) Followup-To: comp.sources.wanted Organization: Maryversity of Uniland, College Park Lines: 17 In article <30410@brunix.UUCP> rca@cs.brown.edu (Ronald C.F. Antony) writes: >Here at Brown we have such a thing running on the sun's. >You might mail admin or someone who knows more about it, if >you can get it or if it suits your needs.. > >Ronald >unreasonable man." - Bernhard Shaw | rca@cs.brown.edu or antony@browncog.bitnet Isn't a simulator a program that compiles assembly code for another machine? I thought the Sun's were 680** based machines (except for, of course, the i386 Sun). Though a generic portable (say C) source code simulator in theory could then called an assembler if run on the same particular chip that the simulator was for. (boy my English is degrading... sleep) -- == Ronald Lee (ronlee@eng.umd.edu) (301) 454-6849 Univ. of Maryland == == (non-MX mail: ronlee@bacchus.eng.umd.edu) EE Computer == == UUCP: uunet!eng.umd.edu!ronlee (301) 454-1526 Facility == ==============="It's not my fault, the computer did it!!!"==================