Thanks for your answers!
Dr Jefyll wrote:
ROM's (as you seem to suggest) were simply out of reach except for commercial firms with deep pockets. Because of the hefty setup charge, it doesn't make economic sense to order a batch of ROM's unless a rather large quantity is involved.
Unfortunately, just as expected.
At least it explains why EPROMs could be installed in the Apple II as an alternative.
This basically means that you had to
1) wait for the year 1977 when the 2 kb 2716 EPROM was released (or 1979 for the 2732),
2) then buy four of them for 8 kb and have some company program them for you.
Dr Jefyll wrote:
EPROM's were affordable. I don't recall the prices, but you could refer to the advertising in period issues of BYTE magazine and others.
Interestingly, according to an advert I found in "Micro - The 6502 Journal" from 1977, the EPROM 2716 costs $38 and the 2 kb 4116 Ram $42, only slightly more. This means that the memory alone (16 kb Ram, 8 kb Rom) costs 8 * $42 + 4 * $38 = $488 for a home-made 6502 computer back then. Not exactly cheap, but that's how it was.
(Just in case you wonder why I asked this question: I am currently working on a 6502 computer (right now emulation only, later perhaps FPGA), and I am curious if this computer could actually have been built in the 70s.)