October 2022
Meeting Notes

Compiled by Dave Jaffe

Contributions from Kevin Appert and others


SVFIG on Google+ Hangout: long url - tinyurl

SVFIG on Google+ - SVFIG on YouTube - SVFIG on YouTube Live

SVFIG YouTube Channel

Zoom Chat

09:34

Start of Zoom Meeting - Kevin Appert

09:31

October Forth Challenge - Syllable Parsing- Bill Ragsdale
"Let us begin a proto-AI program. Create a list of about 20 words. Create a set of rules to parse them into syllables. Consider if your words should be diverse or similar (cat & dog vs. baby & babies). I have no idea if this is easy or difficult."

Video (37:26)
Bill Ragsdale's slides
Brad Nelson's slides

10:00

Assembler / Disassembler for the ESP32 - Brad Nelson
“The ESP32 uses the Xtensa LX6 instruction set, a 32-bit RISC architecture with a range of optional 'modules', many of which are present on the ESP32. I'll present my project to add an Xtensa assembler / disassembler to ESP32forth.”

Video (57:11)
Slides
ESP32forth

11:05

CoSy Update - Bob Armstrong
Bob will present a few minutes of updates

Video (40:51)

11:41

Forth Day and the Future In-person SVFIG - Group Discussion
Individuals are encouraged to attend in-person SVFIG meetings at Stanford.

11:46

End of Zoom Meeting


Other items:

Forth
Forth for MSP430
Forth Tutorials
Forth CPUs
Forth Articles and Blogs
Forth Programming Books
Forth Jobs - submitted by Dennis Ruffer
Other Jobs
Green Arrays
Forth People
Products in Forth
Misc Forth Stuff
Computers
Chips
Components
Software Applications
Space Applications
Space stuff
Programming Languages other than Forth
Operating Systems
Utilities
Hardware
Other Books and Magazines
Manuals & Documentation
Articles
How Ted Hoff Invented the First Microprocessor
Applications
Stores
Robots
Games
Companies
Lectures
People
Surplus Houses
Meetings
Videos
Courses
Trade Shows
Podcasts
Personal Computer History
Do you recognize any of these electronic items from the past?
Retro Computing
Tutorials
Education
Contests
Blogs
Other
The rule-breaking paper microscope that costs $1.75 to make
Lost something? Search through 91.7 million files from the ’80s, ’90s, and 2000s


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