Sujet : Re: Past Blast - "Wonder Woman 1984" - Corp Guy Using PET
De : c186282 (at) *nospam* nnada.net (c186282)
Groupes : comp.os.linux.miscDate : 03. Apr 2025, 21:34:04
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <vLqdnVb4yaZObXP6nZ2dnZfqn_qdnZ2d@giganews.com>
References : 1 2 3 4
User-Agent : Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:78.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/78.13.0
On 4/3/25 2:42 PM, rbowman wrote:
On Thu, 3 Apr 2025 06:26:16 -0400, c186282 wrote:
Also always wanted a good S-100 system ... but could not afford one
way back then. THINK they hung on all the way to the 68k chips, but
after that the bus was too slow. NOW I can't afford a working re-sell
The rumor back then was the S-100 bus came from someone finding a great
deal on milsurp edge connectors. There were a number of alternatives.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/STD_Bus
I can believe it ... hey, why use EXPENSIVE custom
edge connectors ? :-)
Despite the name, the STD bus wasn't a standard. Sprague Electric had a
severe case of NIH so I designed a bus for them that used a Z80 processor,
memory cards, and I/O cards. You could get away with a lot with 3.57 MHz.
It was fun and they were willing to pay for the project but a COTS
solution would have made more sense.
Sounds like you went further into custom electronics
than I ever did. However, back in the day, DIY was
much more common and NEEDED.
I'll have to check ... I think S-100 was solid up to
four or five MHz. The Z80s were the most common CPU
but I'd seen them with lots of others. The main reason
to stick with S-100 was all the ready-made periph cards
back in the days when the CPU board did NOT have built-
in everything. Had to have a sep serial board, sep
printer card(s), sep drive interface card(s) .....
indeed I think on some even the CPU was not all on
one board.
According to one source, Cromeco sold a 16.7 MHz 68020
board for S-100 ... but that'd be pushing things.
Alas the biggest problem was that the use of those
100 lines tended to 'evolve' over time, which could
increase incompatibility issues.
Anyway, I'd be happy with a Cromeco Z80 with a floppy
and serial board and maybe 128kb. Good solid CP/M
system blast from the past. Yes, you can buy TINY
Z80 SBCs now, even seen kits ... but that's not as
fun or impressive :-)
Hey, the earlier versions of Turbo Pascal came
with a CP/M variant ... don't remember if that
was just CP/M-86 or actually for Z80s.