[sdiy] OT: COSMAC Elf 2000
anthony
aankrom at bluemarble.net
Thu Jan 31 01:35:40 CET 2008
Oh that's right. It was the 8080. That's almost like saying a '386 is like a
'286. Maybe not as bad...
This made me think of something else. Can you make a preporgrammed 80X9 uCU
ignore its burnt ROM and use an outboard ROM?
----- Original Message -----
From: "Larry Troth" <larry at unicode.com>
To: <synth-diy at dropmix.xs4all.nl>
Sent: Wednesday, January 30, 2008 5:50 PM
Subject: RE: [sdiy] OT: COSMAC Elf 2000
> Actually the Altair was based on the Intel 8080 8-bit cpu. Several years
> older then the 8088/8086 cpus. But it could still be a worth while
> project.
> (The IEEE-696 {?} specification did allow for 16 bit data, but the primary
> bus was built for 16 bit address and 8 bit data.)
>
> Larry T.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: synth-diy-bounces at dropmix.xs4all.nl
> [mailto:synth-diy-bounces at dropmix.xs4all.nl] On Behalf Of anthony
> Sent: Wednesday, January 30, 2008 11:45 AM
> To: synth-diy at dropmix.xs4all.nl
> Subject: [sdiy] OT: COSMAC Elf 2000
>
> A while back I saw an article in Nuts & Volts magazine about the COSMAC
> Elf
> 2000. At first I read the project article avidly, hoping for a cool
> project
> that might consume a lion's share of my vast TTL logic collection. Then I
> get to the part where it says a lot of the logic was replaced for our
> circuit building convenience by a PAL or two. So then I was totally soured
> onthe Elf 2000. This was one of the things I HATED about projects in
> Radio-Electronics: they'd hook you in with a cool sounding project and
> then
> you'd find it was centered around some wonderful new VLSI chip that my
> paper-route-having teenage ass couldn't afford. It was like they couldn't
> think up a lot of decent projects for kids like me who had scrounged a lot
> of parts from old radios & TV's. Of course the solution was to go to the
> local library (Logansport, Indiana at that time) and bug the basement
> clerks
>
> for all of their back issues of Radio-Electronics & Popular Electronics.
> My
> father had several of the latter and in the late 70's, they really knew
> how
> to put a few cool easy to build projects in their pages. I think my
> problem
> was I was buying RE from the period 1985-1989 (and later for a spell in
> the
> 90's when I was no longer a teenager).
>
> So the point of this messge: I thought about it and figured I could
> probably
>
> make an Altair clone for cheaper than an Elf 2000 or even the original
> COSMAC Elf. I have all sorts of 74LS373's and 74LS374's and a few 8088's.
> I
> know that the original Altair was based on an 8086, but the switch
> shouldn't
>
> be too hard.
>
> It would be cool if I had some hex display Nixies (all mine are decimal),
> but a huge LED array and an army of 7-segment displays should work fine.
>
>
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