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VICE derives from X64, the first Commodore 64 emulator for the X Window
System. Here is an informal list of the people who were mostly involved
in the development of X64 and VICE:
The VICE core team:
-
Ettore Perazzoli (ettore@comm2000.it)
made the 6510, VIC-II, VIC-I and CRTC emulations, part of the
hardware-level 1541 emulation, speed optimizations, bug fixes,
the event-driven cycle-exact engine, the Xt/Xaw/Xfwf-based GUI for X11, a
general code reorganization, the new resource handling, most of the
documentation and the MS-DOS port (well, somebody had to do it).
-
Teemu Rantanen (tvr@cs.hut.fi)
implemented the SID emulation and the trap-based disk drive and serial bus
implementation; added support for multiple display depths under X11.
-
André Fachat (fachat@physik.tu-chemnitz.de)
wrote the PET and CBM-II emulators, the CIA and VIA emulation, the IEEE488
interface, implemented the IEC serial bus in
xvic and made tons
of bug fixes.
-
Daniel Sladic (sladic@eecg.toronto.edu)
started the work on hardware-level 1541 emulation and wrote the
new monitor introduced with VICE 0.15.
-
Andreas Boose (boose@linux.rz.fh-hannover.de)
gave lots of information and bug reports about the VIC-II, the 6510 and
the CIAs; moreover, he wrote several test-routines that were used to
improve the emulation. He also added cartridge support and has
been the main head behind the drive emulation since version
0.15.
-
Dag Lem (resid@nimrod.no) implemented the reSID SID
emulation engine.
Former team members:
-
Jouko Valta (jopi@stekt.oulu.fi) wrote
petcat and
c1541, T64 handling, user service and
maintenance (most of the work in x64 0.3.x was made by him); retired
from the project in July 96, after VICE 0.10.0.
-
Jarkko Sonninen (sonninen@lut.fi) was the founder of the
project, wrote the old version of the 6502 emulation and the XDebugger,
and retired from the project after x64 0.2.1.
External contributors:
(We hope we have not forgotten anybody; if you think we have, please
tell us.)
Thanks also to everyone else for sending suggestions, ideas,
bug reports, questions and requests. In particular, a warm thank
goes to the following people:
Last but not least, a very special thank to Andreas Arens, Lutz Sammer,
Edgar Tornig, Christian Bauer, Wolfgang Lorenz, Miha Peternel and Per
Hâkan Sundell for writing cool emulators to compete with. :-)
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