Hello all,

I've found myself with the first sizable chunk of free time I've had in years. 
I've been having so much fun! But I must admit, after a bunch of 
hustle-your-butt software work, the software part isn't completely satisfying 
me. 

I miss taking apart computers. It's wonderful that they've gotten so small, but 
it comes at a price, I think. No one's really figured out a way to make 
something that small which leaves room for serviceability. When I was a kid, I 
learned _so much_ with the case open.

Somewhere I read about an XO installation where they found a little girl who'd 
set up an assembly line and was doing her own repairs on other kids laptops. No 
one asked her to, she just decided to do it. It really warmed my heart:) and I 
couldn't help feeling some nostalgia, because I was *totally* that kid.

And when you add free time to life long love, well, hah! I'm gonna build a 
computer this year. I was thinking it would be fun to throw out the Intel 
architecture and look at alternatives. I know nothing of silicon, not really, 
and so I'm liable to grab parts off of the shelf, though that visual-6502 
simulator I found on the web has me tempted all the same.

For a CPU, I thought it might be interesting, and temporarily future-proof, to 
go with something ARM. I know people have had the Squeak VM running on ARM 
chips, which is sort of my only req'ment anymore, outside of the web browser 
which lets me live in the modern world. But then I stopped. 

What about Frank?

I have a feeling Frank should work anywhere, but since I've only seen things 
Ian is doing, I thought I'd stop to ask. If I wanted to be able to run VPRI's 
bits (if and) when they become generally available, is there a particular chip 
architecture I should go with?

Okay that's the first question. The other question is, was there anything in 
particular about the Alto that folks on this list miss? Would the Alto make an 
interesting case study for me to explore, or have modern computers imitated it 
to the point where it isn't the thing to examine? I'm picking my way through 
the wikipedia article, but it occurs to me that not having used the thing, it 
might be hard for the details on the wiki to jump out at me in any sort of 
"aha" moment. 

Not sure that the tech is at the point where I can hope to construct something 
Dynabook-shaped, but I know that I can make one improvement to the interim 
desktop design just by using a flat panel that will swivel into a portrait 
orientation:)
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