Minimig

Minimig started around January 2005 as a proof of concept by Dutch electrical engineer Dennis van Weeren.

The project's source code and schematics were released under version 3 of the GNU General Public Licence on 25 July 2007.

The second has a MultiMediaCard slot with a small PIC microcontroller acting as a disc controller that supports the FAT16 filesystem and does on-the-fly Amiga disk file (ADF) decoding.

CPU cache and memory speed is vital for the Synthesis + Place & Route Silicon compiler in FPGA generation software.

[13] On 22 December 2008, a modification of the original PCB by piggybacking another set of SRAM chips enables up to 4 MiB of RAM in total.

[23] On 2006-10-11 Jens Schönfeld at Individual Computers revealed that they had been working on a commercial Amiga-in-FPGA for the past year called "Clone-A" that is similar to Minimig.

The system intends to use clone chips to replace CIAs, Paula, Gary, Agnus and Denise, and the CPU will be the original from Motorola.

[25] Inspired by Minimig, Till Harbaum invented MIST,[26] an open FPGA based implementation of Atari ST and Amiga intended to have a low price and be easy built at home.

Vampire V4 Standalone, released by Apollo Team in 2019, provides ECS/AGA chipset re-implementation, plus 68080 CPU and SAGA core, also using a field-programmable gate array (FPGA)[citation needed].

Minimig 120x120 mm PCB board ( Nano-ITX size) [ 1 ]