Hello everyone!
I've been designing and coding for my Acolyte 6502 Computer for a while now (most recent topic on that here
viewtopic.php?f=4&t=7407).
For as long as I've been designing it, I've had two goals in mind:
1) Use it for video games for Math Appreciation Day (most recent topic on that here
viewtopic.php?f=1&t=7585).
2) Use it to help teach high school aged folks the basics of digital electronics. This is the reason for this new topic.
I find that the Ben Eater kits + videos are good, but ultimately I feel that breadboards should not be the final goal. I also feel that it lacks solid human input/output interfaces, particularly *useful* video, easy keyboard, and mass storage capabilities. Some of these are easy to get without Ben's personal help, some he has tried himself but fell short. [ These are my opinions, you can have your own opinions of course. ]
What other kits out there can give you the full home microcomputer experience, while still being understandable and yet useful? Ones that don't give you black box FPGA chips that run 100 times faster than the 6502, or try to hide some critical aspects behind epoxy blobs? What is designed not for experts but interested beginners, yet give them a long lasting product they can be proud of, and "own it" themselves? What is not $300 just to run BASIC?
I am proposing to use the Acolyte as a "solder it yourself" kit (or maybe also a pre-soldered kit?), certainly under $100, coming with a great user manual that doubles as a curriculum of sorts. Videos are also a possibility. And although I am a math teacher, I cannot make digital electronics curriculum to save my life it seems. I need someone who likes writing, someone who would partner with me to get something out there, and perhaps make some money while doing it. Is that person you?
Feel free to post here, or PM me if you'd rather do that. I'm happy to take suggestions as well, even critical.
Thank you everyone.
Chad