Комментарии:
I absolutely loved this video! I was actually hoping for some differences a-la V20 but I guess just a clone. Super neat!
ОтветитьI'm curious about how hot they get under 100% load...
ОтветитьI am always amazed of how russians are proud of their cheap products made with stolen technology. Is there nothing russians can steal and still feel like they are entitled? They need to spend most of their time stealing from each other like they were taught in school.
ОтветитьWhat about current draw or heat dissipation? What was cost per unit back then? If it shares the same clock speed and instruction set it should come out the same in bench marks.
ОтветитьImpressive clean-room reverse engineering! This is happening when your engineers have KGB training...
ОтветитьShow!!🕶
ОтветитьPerfectly stollen! And awesome soviet packaging!
Ответить"Developed between 1982 and 1985"
The 386 was released in Oct of 1985 with the 486 following in 1989 which goes to show how insanely quick you could fall behind in those days. But that's not a knock on the Soviets, it was a crazy time for computers.
I saw a very cool video a few years back. it included footage of a the japanese consumer markets in the 80s. they said, word was, the soviets were buying u.s. technology on the open market...
Ответить"...always nice to have something 'ceramic in the socket' !" LOL!
ОтветитьThis is dumb. How does the Soviet chip compare to the NEC V20?
ОтветитьThe 8088 is not an 8 bit CPU. It's 16 bits internally, just like the 8086, but with an 8 bit external bus, compared with 16 bit bus for the 8086.
Ответить... хорошая работа, Товарищ.
ОтветитьSie ist ja cool! :) top! :)
Ответить2023. The video gives a glimpse into soviet era chip. The out takes ate a treat!
ОтветитьIt is hard to make difference, both are limited by bus wich clock is the same and memory speed.
I'm not sure but I read somewhere that NEC V20 and V30 were faster but I'm not sure that was diffrent core or accepted higher clock.
maybe you try overclocking ? 😉
Ha ha...lol... i had this screwdrivers form both with newspapers 🤣 They have beautiful colorful grips and totaly soft ends... i see you adopted this to chip wrench 😆
ОтветитьI have identical hard drive somwhere in deep storage...
ОтветитьThey probably made a direct copy of the CPU instead of "developing" it. Jesus, learn English or German, wife.
ОтветитьИнтерестное видео 😊 Hi
ОтветитьAlways include you beautiful wife in your videos.
ОтветитьВ чем была проблема Алисе сделать русские субтитры к видео?...
ОтветитьПорой алгоритмы Ютуба выдает действительно необычный и интересный контент. Очень занимательное сравнение чипов!
Ответитьi learned assembly on an 8088. i wrote gfx libraries on a card that was too big for my isa slots but allowed me to access the 8bit graphics mode including 13h.
i was able to a single polygon with a mapped surface to scale and rotate on an 8088 in screen mode 13h.
i also used the 8088 to optimize code. id time my procedures on it to shave off milliseconds and squeeze every bit of speed from my code before porting it to faster computers.
надо было проверить на сколько возможно увеличение частоты
ОтветитьWhere would one find something like that?
Ответитьthese chips are extremally simple comparing to modern CPUs that have all kinds of options and code that will branch based on the CPU's capabilities. The old chips are the exact clones that must produce the exact same results when ran on the same clock speed. You should overclock them and see which one can handle more speed.
Ответить"... Советский чип выиграет!" +1 :)
ОтветитьSpasibo, tovarisch! I own a newly made copy of the Soviet home-pc Poisk-2. It is powered by the Soviet clone of 8086 at 8 MHz and could hold up to 2 Mb of RAM. Then in 1991 it was a brilliant PC for home use, now it is good for running all xt's and many of the 286's games.
Ответитьсоветский процессор был спизжен
ОтветитьYou sound like diode gone Wild
ОтветитьIt's a Philips Headstar board
ОтветитьShould be using a DSO and displaying waveforms from data pins and address/data pins. The utilities used are too indirect. Beside, there would be some info in BIOS, e.g. serial number to identify the factory run. That is accessible to users as well. That would reveal the chip's origins - which is not the USSR. Or isolate CPU ona breadboard and wire up to run a NOP, then see the address increment on LEDs tied to the address bus. I've done that with the Z80. This is all BS. The CPUs are from China. One can't knock out silicon discs on a short-term basis. The investment is in the billions, i.e. the fabrication plant and skilled personnel. Chinese have the mentality for copying. Russians ? Hmm
ОтветитьNow you could cool the CPU down to -50°C to test, if the soviet CPU is military grade.
Ответитьnow this is what i call THE colder war. (for who don't get it, i mean by colder cpu so that it doesn't burn to coal.)
ОтветитьCongrats Bro.
Ответить1810VM88 is a practical clone of 8088, there shouldn't be any performance difference between them. It is much more interesting to compare 8080, 8088 and similar processors with Soviet processors 1801VM1 + 1801VM2 and 1801VM3.
Ответить❤👍
ОтветитьAs a Russian, I am proud that we could make processors, and now? We buy everything from China, what a shame
Ответить;;;;
ОтветитьСоветы почти все крали, не исключение стали и эти процессоры. А могли бы разработать свое...
ОтветитьWait... why do I understand Russian without subtitles?! She is speaking Russian, right? Sanity check, please?
ОтветитьThis... has my attention... I've long wondered about Soviet replicas. I shall watch.
ОтветитьThis would be the equivalent of a Russian or Chinese production CPU being on par with a Ryzen 1700 today, which would be unthinkable despite the impressive gains that both Chinese and Russian chipmakers have developed in recent years, even without access to TSMC fabs.
ОтветитьCan't believe I've only just discovered your channel, brilliant stuff and what a collection.🙂
ОтветитьShe has perfect russian by the way.
Ответитьshes cute :-)
ОтветитьI'm going to say the capitalist pig chip will run better
Ответить