Hello,
My interest in computers started with a 200-in-1 electronics kit from Radio Shack, which started me down the path of electronics and the "Engineer's Notebook" series, and eventually being on a first name basis with the staff at RS. This was coupled with getting a Commodore 64. I had the advanced programming manual, which came with a full size schematic diagram of the computer (which I had laminated). This sparked my interest in what's inside computers and how they worked. Peeking into the insides of computers has stayed with me to this day, in the form of taking things apart, or at least taking the cover off. From taking apart the garage door opener (I'd caused it to stop working, which really P-O'd my mother), to later, as a systems administrator, popping the hood off of $200k storage arrays to see what was inside.
Like some on here, during the pandemic I found myself a bit restless and needing something besides work (which was in a lull/rut for me), when I stumbled upon the Ben Eater videos on YouTube. This got me back on the path of computers and electronics, and it re-sparked this childhood obsession. I built the breadboard 6502, I got a soldering station and built Dawid Buchwald's open source computer. Then I logged into Easy EDA and designed a two layer board for the breadboard computer (which worked!).
I am in awe with what is available and what is possible. As a hobbyist, I can use free software to design a multi-layer circuit board and have it manufactured? Five copies of my board arrived at my doorstep for less than $7 USD. I'm not sure my child self could have imagined this.
So here's where I am now. I have a scope (I picked up a Siglent), a DMM, a cheap logic analyzer, a bench power supply, and the desire to learn more. I'm curious about so many things, I think the hardest part will be to pick something to focus on. Higher clock rate? Serial interface? Four line LCD? I2C/SPI? Keyboard? Dual-VIA? I think my next several steps will be on a breadboard, at least.
I am very grateful to join this board, where there are things going on at every level. Not to mention the technical support from professionals, advanced hobbyists, and others like me.
I'd like to maybe proxy requests from a computer to the outside world. This led me to learn a bit about i2c. I couldn't get the 6502 quite working, so I stepped back and got 2 Arduinos talking first. I'll revisit this at some point.
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File comment: nearly getting i2c working with an Arduino
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Following Eater's VGA video. This was also a lesson in patience and debugging. All the papers were checklists and notes to track down all the errors in my wiring.
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File comment: learning patience and debugging
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I wanted to learn PCB design, so I learned the basics of EasyEDA, read board design requests/comments, and designed this. It worked! Now I have a "permanent" version of the BE6502 I could use for further development.
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File comment: learning pcb design
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