With all the talk about possible updated Amigas lately, I just thought I'd share something I discovered today:
Intel has announced the Stellarton; it amounts to a chip containing an Atom CPU @ 600-1600MHz, a whole peripheral chipset, and best of all,
an Altera FPGA that's fast, fully integrated, and software-rewritable from the CPU. In other words, it's basically a whole
computer on one chip, plus a giant roll-your-own-hardware sandbox. Call me crazy, but this sounds like the
perfect piece of technology to build a next-gen Amiga out of.
As anyone who's tried to run an emulator on a lower-end PC knows, the big performance sink is in trying to provide accurate audio and video output; the CPU is generally trivial by comparison. Offloading the A/V emulation to an FPGA reimplementation would free up the Atom to focus on everything else, chiefly the CPU emulation (assuming that the FPGA couldn't do that faster, of course.) And since the Stellarton includes basically a full motherboard chipset in the Atom part of the package, you wouldn't even need a custom PCB to start with; whatever Intel provides in the way of a development board should suffice. Heck, you could even use the Atom natively, if you're one of those [strike]weenies[/strike] fine people who prefer AROS.
Maybe I'm talking crazy talk, but considering what's been pulled off with an FPGA
alone, it seems like this could be an easy and inexpensive path to a next-gen Amiga platform. At any rate, I am
definitely looking forward to 2011
