This is a longer post. Grab a coffee :-)
The future of OS9A few of us have tackled the "future topic" before. Even our beloved admin
issued a statement about using emulation a few weeks ago. As our Macs get older, it takes more time & money to keep them running. And some users frown upon the thought of having old hardware in their home and rely only on software emulatiom.
So do we all eventually have to move on to Windows machines, emulate Mac OS with QEMU and pretend we're still Mac OS9 users? We could, but we'd lose a lot by it, wouldn't we? And I'm not talking about the software incompatibility issues ...
Other niche systems have had the same problem - the Atarians, the Amigans. How do they tackle the problem? They went
FPGA.
How would that help us?Essentially it's hardware emulation. It would be new hardware, but acting 100% like the old. Good for the next decades. Imagine: By flashing this FPGA with different cores you could turn the same board into a SE/30 and plant it into an original case. Or you make it an iMac and plant it into the beautiful casing, running 9.2 on it. Or build your own case for it?
The Amigans did create such an FPGA, even turning it into a stand-alone computer: The "Vampire". Essentially an FPGA with a core for a 68060 cpu running Amiga OS at high speeds. There's even new software being written for it. I heard the Atarians have the FireBee FPGA though I don't know any details (I vaguely remember Mat telling me about that project years ago ....anything interesting to add here @Mat?)
OK. How do we get a Mac FPGA?For years I had hoped that someone would undertake the task to create a Macintosh FPGA. There has been an attempt at a Mac Plus core for the MIST FPGA, but it stalled at an early age. If one were to replicate the full System 6 to Mac OS 9 spectrum, the project would definitely not be an easy one. It would require someone with
- a deep hardware understanding
- a dedication to (classic) Mac OS
- not primary financial interest as there is no mass-market and you're likely to "just" break-even
- not being afraid of Tim's lawyers
I know what you're thinking and you're right. Nobody on earth will fullfil all four criteria.
Well, like I said, you're right. But there is one person that comes to my mind that could match at least 3 out of 4. Guess the name?
The Woz.
Did Bolkonskij lose his mind? Actually not. Woz is an overall amazingly cool guy. He's interested in hardware rather than software. And while he's more of a Apple I & II guy, he's not a stranger to the Macintosh. Best of all, if he builds 3.000 FPGAs for some hobbyists, Tim Apple won't risk sueing his ass for the bad press alone.
Even if The Woz wouldn't want to do it himself, he might *know* the right people who could pull it off, protected under his sacred wings. If you got a name, you gotta use it, right?
How could we ever get Woz to think about it even?Remember the days we pestered companies like LucasArts to port X-Wing to Mac OS? Sometimes it worked, sometimes not. But when it worked, it was because of a collective effort by a community convincing the decision-makers. Let's try the same thing.
I don't propose pestering poor Woz!
Instead, let's coordinate sending him Christmas Cards for 2021 ! Wish him a Merry Christmas / Happy Holidays (whatever you'd like) and ask him about creating a classic Mac OS FPGA. Ask nicely. Be polite. Tell him Mac OS is still being used and loved. Tell him, it needs to be preserved. Tell him you trust him to do it.
To top it off, you could create the very Christmas Card on Mac OS to show how useful it can still be and mention that.
Print Shop is still a good software. Or pixel a nice Christmas pic, print and glue it onto the card :-) I for one will use Studio/1 and pixel some b&w 1-bit Christmas motive.
I'll definitely send him a card, I just wonder if someone else from here would love to join in?
I'm writing this early in September, I know. Christmas 2021 seems far away. But I think we're all busy with our lives and having some lead time will be helpful. Plus if you're sending the card from somewhere around the world to the U.S. (like me!) it'll likely take some more days to arrive.
The more cards the man gets the more vivid our community will look like and the more likely such a new FPGA might become.Anyone interested in joining in?