04-02-2015, 06:42 AM
Minecraft name: spacelad101
What do you like the most about redstone?:
tl;dr: The fact that it makes a fantastic binary simulator/stand-in.
What's a thing you have made which demonstrates redstone knowledge?:
Oh god... Did an extremely basic 8 bit CPU (ended up a calculator) when I first started. 256Kbytes of addressable memory. Started designing instructions from the 32bit MIPS-I instruction set in redstone but got side tracked with school and never completed the CPU (in redstone). Funny enough, for my final project this January in my Gr. 12 Comp. Engineering class, I turned in logic designs (made in Logisim) from scratch of every instruction from the MIPS-I instruction set (a few I omitted due to time restrictions) assembled in to a CPU that could read/write, and decode/execute instructions inside of Logisim. I actually wanted to take my logic designs and apply them on this server. Oh, and I almost forgot about my brutally space inefficient base 2 to (7seg) base 10 converter, I kind of want to redo this using the double-dabble algorithm. I've probably done more I am forgetting about, but I wouldn't have pictures of anything else even if I could remember...
What does it do?:
Well. The CPU (again, more like a calculator), calculated things... The 256Kbytes of memory stored binary in 8 bit memory segments. The base 2 to base 10 converter converts binary into base 10 and throws it onto a 7 segment display.
Image and/or video, from imgur.com or youtube.com:
The minecraft screenshots are pretty old, please don't hold it against me, I havent had time to play in a while... I've also included the logic designs to demonstrate my logic design capabilities and that I plan to use when building (if I am accepted and it is alright you you fine folks).
http://imgur.com/a/bA7i1?gallery#0
I also have a github repo of all of the .circ files I created in logisim, as well as a very basic assembler me and a friend wrote in python that converts user written assembly in to several formats, such as straight binary, addressed hexdecimal, and the type of file logisim is able to import.
https://github.com/spacelad101/mips-digital-logic
Do you agree with the rules?:
Of course
What do you like the most about redstone?:
tl;dr: The fact that it makes a fantastic binary simulator/stand-in.
What's a thing you have made which demonstrates redstone knowledge?:
Oh god... Did an extremely basic 8 bit CPU (ended up a calculator) when I first started. 256Kbytes of addressable memory. Started designing instructions from the 32bit MIPS-I instruction set in redstone but got side tracked with school and never completed the CPU (in redstone). Funny enough, for my final project this January in my Gr. 12 Comp. Engineering class, I turned in logic designs (made in Logisim) from scratch of every instruction from the MIPS-I instruction set (a few I omitted due to time restrictions) assembled in to a CPU that could read/write, and decode/execute instructions inside of Logisim. I actually wanted to take my logic designs and apply them on this server. Oh, and I almost forgot about my brutally space inefficient base 2 to (7seg) base 10 converter, I kind of want to redo this using the double-dabble algorithm. I've probably done more I am forgetting about, but I wouldn't have pictures of anything else even if I could remember...
What does it do?:
Well. The CPU (again, more like a calculator), calculated things... The 256Kbytes of memory stored binary in 8 bit memory segments. The base 2 to base 10 converter converts binary into base 10 and throws it onto a 7 segment display.
Image and/or video, from imgur.com or youtube.com:
The minecraft screenshots are pretty old, please don't hold it against me, I havent had time to play in a while... I've also included the logic designs to demonstrate my logic design capabilities and that I plan to use when building (if I am accepted and it is alright you you fine folks).
http://imgur.com/a/bA7i1?gallery#0
I also have a github repo of all of the .circ files I created in logisim, as well as a very basic assembler me and a friend wrote in python that converts user written assembly in to several formats, such as straight binary, addressed hexdecimal, and the type of file logisim is able to import.
https://github.com/spacelad101/mips-digital-logic
Do you agree with the rules?:
Of course