2026-06-05 14:23:31 Can someone tell me if there's activity on this? https://repo.or.cz/qemu/z80.git 2026-06-05 14:23:45 I can't access, UK's geoblocked 2026-06-05 14:33:04 veltas, you have your own version of roskompozor? 2026-06-05 14:33:35 2009-09-27 Stuart Brady Implement preliminary SAM Coupé emulationmaster commit | commitdiff | tree | snapshot (tar.gz zip) 2026-06-05 14:34:01 veltas, pretty fresh, only 16 years ago 2026-06-05 14:34:59 I can repuload elsewhere if you want 2026-06-05 14:35:33 Why not to use emu80 though? 2026-06-05 14:35:36 Or z80pack 2026-06-05 14:36:00 The latter is for Altair and IMSAI, the former mostly goes with soviet computers 2026-06-05 14:48:57 veltas: Does Wayback Machine work with that? https://web.archive.org/web/2027/http://repo.or.cz/qemu/z80.git ? 2026-06-05 14:57:50 I have to say my own experience with Qemu is limited to the platforms that /do/ have an MMU. While Qemu seems to implement emulation for Arduino and a few STM32 boards, it doesn't seem to emulate /timings/ - which are often essential for embedded software development. Nor have I ever figured how to interact with emulated MCU's GPIO ports. 2026-06-05 14:57:51 FWIW, for AVR, there's Simavr, while for CP/M, there's Ntvcm. 2026-06-05 15:01:52 That's a good idea iv4nshm4k0v (re wayback machine) 2026-06-05 15:03:28 ntvcm looks relevant 2026-06-05 15:04:41 Stalevar: It's mirrored on github then, that also was last updated like 16 years ago 2026-06-05 15:10:46 Then there're the http://floooh.github.io/ webapps. They're written in C (and built into webapps with Emscripten), so presumably might be usable outside of a Big Browser.