In my previous post, I deliberately left Rabbit out. I played with that
board, wanting to implement a fairly little simple TCP/IP server for my
weather station. While it claims a 1MB address space, your code executes in
two 8K sliding windows. And apparently, arraning windows or some BS like
that is left to the user.
All I know for sure is that I'm a fairly experience micro person, and I
couldn't get it to work. My object file was something like 43K with their
stack compiled in. And it was claimed to be "too large". The limited help
I got from Rabbit was an example of how to do it, which was a complete
re-write of my code, and not in a way that made sense. It's a little
difficult to explain, but in spite of Fred Eadys paid endorsement for them,
it sucks.
With all the other choices in micros out there, the Rabbit is best left in
the dumpster^wbox.
--John
-----Original Message-----
From: cctalk-admin_at_classiccmp.org [mailto:cctalk-admin_at_classiccmp.org]On
Behalf Of Tom Uban
Sent: Thursday, May 30, 2002 10:48
To: cctalk_at_classiccmp.org
Subject: Re: CP/M TCP/IP (was Re: CP/M coding question)
You could use a Rabbit board:
http://www.rabbitsemiconductor.com/
--tom
Received on Thu May 30 2002 - 10:05:44 BST