m68k
The Motorola 68000 is a 16/32-bit microprocessor (family) designed by Motorola in 1979. It was the first 16/32-bit microprocessor to be widely used. The 68000 is a CISC processor, with a 16-bit internal data bus and 24-bit address bus. It has a 32-bit data bus in the 68020 and later versions.
The 68000 was used in many personal computers, workstations, and game consoles, including the Apple Macintosh, Atari ST, Commodore Amiga, and the Nintendo Entertainment System.
The 68000 was succeeded by the 68020, 68030, 68040, and 68060, and by the PowerPC 601, 603, 604, 620, and 750.
Here are 179 public repositories matching this topic...
Capstone disassembly/disassembler framework for ARM, ARM64 (ARMv8), Alpha, BPF, Ethereum VM, HPPA, LoongArch, M68K, M680X, Mips, MOS65XX, PPC, RISC-V(rv32G/rv64G), SH, Sparc, SystemZ, TMS320C64X, TriCore, Webassembly, XCore and X86.
-
Updated
Nov 9, 2024 - C
Reko is a binary decompiler.
-
Updated
Nov 8, 2024 - C#
SGDK - A free and open development kit for the Sega Mega Drive
-
Updated
Nov 8, 2024 - C
A latency-hating emulator of: the Acorn Electron and Archimedes, Amstrad CPC, Apple II/II+/IIe and early Macintosh, Atari 2600 and ST, ColecoVision, Enterprise 64/128, Commodore Vic-20 and Amiga, MSX 1/2, Oric 1/Atmos, early PC compatibles, Sega Master System, Sinclair ZX80/81 and ZX Spectrum.
-
Updated
Oct 19, 2024 - C++
Self-hosting metacompiled Forth, bootstrapping from a few lines of C; targets Linux, Windows, ARM, RISC-V, 68000, PDP-11, asm.js.
-
Updated
Feb 13, 2023 - Forth
A compiler for ARM, X86, MSP430, xtensa and more implemented in pure Python
-
Updated
Jul 1, 2022 - Python
An experimental operating system for 32bit Amiga computers.
-
Updated
Nov 8, 2024 - C
Design, documentation and software for the Really Old School Computer (M68K)
-
Updated
Nov 8, 2024 - C
A modern webapp to write, run and learn M68K assembly code
-
Updated
Aug 29, 2024 - Svelte
A Sega Mega CD development framework in C and 68k asm
-
Updated
Jan 30, 2024 - C
Created by Motorola
Released 1979
- Followers
- 5 followers
- Wikipedia
- Wikipedia