09:34:08 From Chris (@UncensoerdNews) : No image on the video. 09:34:14 From Max : Hello, I am Max-Gerd Retzlaff. Greetings from Berlin, Max 09:34:34 From Dave Jaffe : WElcome Max 09:34:54 From Chris (@UncensoerdNews) : Now the image is visible. 09:35:27 From Dave Jaffe : Billas sked me to communicate - "Several significant corrections from the PowerPoint visuals have been made to the posted .PDF". http://www.forth.org/svfig/kk/08-2023-Ragsdale.pdf 10:16:15 From octetta aka joe : What’s the protocol for questions here? 10:17:28 From Dave Jaffe : unmute and ask your question 10:17:56 From octetta aka joe : Reacted to "unmute and ask your ..." with πŸ‘ 10:21:51 From octetta aka joe : My question was related to this for anyone wondering : https://justine.lol/ape.html 10:28:57 From Dave Jaffe : VolksForth Renovation - Philip Zembrod β€œThe old VolksForth is in the process of a major renovation, with the goal of automating its build, unifying the code bases of the different platforms, and, eventually migrating all towards ANS. I will give an overview of the ongoing effort.β€œ 10:32:36 From Don Golding : very interesting talk, Brad! 10:33:06 From Brad Nelson : Thanks :-) 10:35:07 From Don Golding : C, is redefined so it builds the binary image in another section of memory, right? Then you just create a build-now word which copies the memory to a file, right? 10:35:28 From octetta aka joe : Reacted to "very interesting tal..." with πŸ‘ 10:35:34 From octetta aka joe : Reacted to "Thanks :-)" with πŸ‘ 10:36:57 From Don Golding : I guess the other way is to create an assembler file then use an assembly to create the binary. 10:37:26 From Don Golding : in that case, you are creating a source file. 10:37:55 From Brad Nelson : I think I've seen ones redefine c@, but also common seems to be repark HERE to alternate between host and target. 10:38:36 From Don Golding : interesting 10:38:39 From Brad Nelson : Yeah I find just assembling easier to reason about. 10:39:53 From Don Golding : in Windoze, you need some preamble code I would expect. In an embedded system, you are good to to. 10:40:57 From Don Golding : to = go 11:20:36 From Dave Jaffe : davejaffe@stanford.edu 11:21:08 From Christopher Lozinski : https://pythonlinks.info/presentations/ForthPresentation.pdf 11:23:51 From Philip Zembrod : Wow, I didn't know the Propeller contains a Forth! Thank you for that info! 11:24:52 From Liang : Replying to "in Windoze, you need..." Microsoft has announced the ability to run Python within Excel. So I have written a lightweight FORTH, called Phoscript, without full vocabulary within Python and a few other languages (Java, JavaScript, PHP, C++). So I can now sort of do FORTH/Phoscript in Excel now. 11:26:48 From Bob Armstrong : A great friend from Manhattan Libertarians is Jim Lesczynski . 11:37:13 From M Edward Borasky (@znmeb) : IIRC the RP2040 has 256 K bytes of RAM, not bits 11:38:06 From Bob Armstrong : Would be interesting to work on AI hearing aid , fon controlled . 11:38:29 From Philip Zembrod : Reacted to "Microsoft has anno..." with πŸ‘ 11:39:11 From M Edward Borasky (@znmeb) : There is an extended version of the Propeller ROM Forth that you can load into RAM 11:40:56 From octetta aka joe : Has the Propeller TAQOZ author (Peter Jackaki) ever attended SVFIG? 11:42:07 From Dave Jaffe : not that I am aware 11:42:23 From M Edward Borasky (@znmeb) : The programmable hearing aid looks interesting - when will they be available? 11:44:13 From Liang : Reacted to "Microsoft has announ..." with πŸ‘ 11:44:15 From Liang : Removed a πŸ‘ reaction from "Microsoft has announ..." 11:44:16 From Liang : Reacted to "Microsoft has announ..." with πŸ‘ 11:44:44 From M Edward Borasky (@znmeb) : If you want a Scheme in an FPGA, you might want to check out the book "Lisp In Small Pieces". 11:49:37 From Max-Gerd Retzlaff : I am mainly a Common Lisp programmer. On ESP32 chips I often use uLisp (ulisp.com) by David Johnson-Davies. I have give presentation on uLisp on last years European Lisp Symposium ELS 2022. Maybe ulisp and forth would be a nice combination. 11:51:54 From M Edward Borasky (@znmeb) : Yeah, I like uLisp. There's also an embedded Lua but I think uLisp is more popular. 11:54:25 From octetta aka joe : "The nice thing about standards is that you have so many to choose from; furthermore, if you do not like any of them, you can just wait for next year's model." - Tanenbaum 11:54:43 From Don Golding : Reacted to ""The nice thing abou..." with πŸ‘