Hey Tech, Im trying to learn how to make my own computer chips from cpu to ram...

Dude its on breadboards, this thing won't even do a Mhz.

Its a learning tool and a toy. Get off your high horse.

This thread made me remember something. Why are media like CDs, DVDs and blu-rays binary? If they introduced more patterns that can be burnt and read from the discs, storage would increase extremely and the only downside would be having an additional processing step to translate things from and to binary which today's tech is irrelevant.

which with today's tech*

thats still not a computer and shouldn't be called that.
frequency has nothing to do with it, computers can work on sub Hz.

electrical current can flow through neutral mediums
Look, I can't be sure if you're retarded or pretending anymore.
I quit

If you cant understand basic physics than I'm not going to force you. but don't insult me and think you know better.

I did rather well at physics in university, thank you
and in electronics
and semiconductor devices
end electromagnetics
Are you sure you want to go there?
The reason I'm being so pedantic about it is BECAUSE I studied it and rather liked it. So when you say stuff like "electricity is generated" it makes me want to euthanise people who use that phrase as a eugenics program.
You can create a voltage difference, or induce current, but your entire representation of the physics of the problem is lacking.
Having any charge concentration in any system is temporary and very localized, and the entire system will always stay neutral.
I have to ask, what's your background?

I got a PhP in internet trolling.

so you're getting butthurt over semantics?

First thing you start with is an ISA. The easiest to get into is MIPS. Start with r-type and i-type instructions, from integer math. Design an ALU, and a controller. Start small with a simple integer calculator, then work on adding a register, then pipe lining, then add additions for other instructions.

I would also recommend using a HDL like verilog, and a simulator, rather then spending on an FPGA


I hope you like field effect saturation voodoo.