On 10/15/2021 at 8:21 PM, Scott Robison said:
From a purely legal standpoint, in a pure FPGA solution, the ROM is what makes the X-whatever unique. It is based on intellectual property from Cloanto (the kernal, as the current successor to Commodore) and Microsoft (BASIC, though I don't know how the initial license fee Commodore paid transfers to Cloanto but it seems it does indeed transfer). As such, these are not free to copy to other platforms. So having a retro-inspired computer with legally licensed ROM that is derived from the Commodore heritage is one USP. While it would be possible to port the HDL that makes the hardware to other platforms, it would be "useless" to most people without the ROM, and that is encumbered in its current state.
Having a compact FPGA based design that is not subject to some of the downsides of software emulation is another USP. Software emulation is great, and I quite enjoy my The C64, but it isn't ideal. Especially if you think of a Raspberry Pi form factor, an FPGA solution that behaves as a real hardware solution is going to be superior to porting the emulator to an existing SBC platform.
While not directly related to the FPGA nature of the original question, a PETSCII inspired keyboard with symbols printed on the keys is a third USP for the project as we understand it at this time.
Given some time and less of a time crunch (I have to get ready to go teach some middle schoolers how to write Python) I may be able to come up with more, but I think those three are significant. Whether they are enough to entice people to buy into the platform is another question.
Sure, I get that if you can build an ecosystem around the X16 core, that can be something lead to something unique on the "soft" front so to speak. The keyboard is a nice bonus as well. I already have the premium one at home. Maybe David's YouTube following will help make all that happen and then the generic nature of the hardware might not even matter. Perhaps that will be the way it goes.
I guess my point is, there is already a plethora of cheap, powerful FPGA retro boards available in reasonable volumes on one hand, as well as unique cased retro platforms like the ZX Spectrum Next, MEGA65 (licensed too both) and perhaps Foenix to a degree, it will be important for the X16 to finds its niche. The previous plan with a desktop case, discrete chips etc. certainly was one way. If that were not to be, IMO it would be useful to define some other niche that sets it apart from these, but it is unclear to me what that might be. Just my two cents.