I have an Atari 5200, Atari TT030, Mac SE, a Mini, and an iMac down in the basement. The first 3 are truly museum pieces.
![]() I have an Atari 5200, Atari TT030, Mac SE, a Mini, and an iMac down in the basement. The first 3 are truly museum pieces. Regards, -scott Welcome to Rivendell, Mr. Anderson. |
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![]() I also have a hobbyist Z80 dev board somewhere (from outfit in Melbourne called Talking Electronics). I used to know how to hand-assemble Z80 code... This was the sort of thing that predated the Arduino by several decades but attempted to teach much the same thing. Wade. |
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![]() (This was in the mid-80s.) He often talked like he was eventually going get back to it, but I doubt that he ever did. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S-100_bus He managed to get a few HP Integral PCs for his lab. Neat machines, but ungodly expensive at the time (~ $4000, IIRC). Cheers, Scott. |
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![]() . . taking up space in the garage. Mine was an 8/16 (bits, that is). |
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![]() Multiuser turbodos which ran cp/m programs. Each s100 bus board drove a single Televideo 910 terminal over serial line. Single 20mb Minnie Winnie hard disk that everyone shares. Ran wordstar, multiplan, and dbase, as well as a variety of language compilers. My simple favorite was pilot. Multiplan had linked spreadsheets 10 years before lotus 123. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/PILOT |
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![]() Well at least the control panel and CPU board. That included laying out and etching the circuit cards and soldering on chip sockets. The CPU board had Z-80 processor and the EPROM with a "borrowed" 4 KB BASIC interpreter and what is in effect a BIOS. As I recall, besides the S-100 board which has nothing but connectors, I bought an 8 KB memory card and a display card which attached to a TV. The control board had umpteen switches for setting up addresses and loading data into memory. It was possible to step through one CPU instruction at a time. Also, I had circuitry to write and read data to an audio tape recorder. Biggest problem was it was extremely noisy RF wise. You could not watch a TV anywhere in the house. I bought a TR-80 and retired the S-100. But, I even modified the TRS-80 so it could display lower case characters. Alex "There is a cult of ignorance in the United States, and there has always been. The strain of anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that "my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge." -- Isaac Asimov |
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![]() Hell, you beat Mel |