> CF and SmartMedia cards can be cheaper and easier
> to find than the Atmel 45DB serial dataflash chips.
Digi-Key's prices on SmartMedia are lower, but both are in stock. SmartMedia however will require more hardware to interface. This appears to always be the case for parallel-interface flash.
The Digi-Key catalog lists the Atmel 8Mx8 serial Dataflash at $45; but the Panasonic 8Mx8 flash PC card (PCMCIA) is $146 on page 348 of the Sep-Dec '01 catalog. This is typically what I have found.
For parts that a few distributors like Digi-Key, Mouser, Allied, and Newark do not stock, I'm finding that it can indeed be difficult to buy specialized memory types in small quantities. I thought I had just found a source for Mosaic (Apta Group) battery-backable 2Mx8 SRAM in a 36-pin DIP, and then found that there's a 100-piece minimum order at $85/each! (The Dallas part with the integral non-replaceable lithium battery is $225.) I decided to make my own by stacking 4 512Kx8's on a DIP header and standing a 74HC139 on the end to select the right one based on A19 and A20. It will be tall, but an acceptable solution for just a few pieces.
Something else I want to try for really compact 6502 workbench computer operating system storage is putting a 24512 64Kx8 serial EEPROM in an 8-pin DIP onto an 8- or 10-position dual-row pin header. I'll probably try to figure out a way to make it hot-pluggable, but the whole thing would fit in under 3/4" square! The 24512 is still pretty new and not easy to find yet; but I've had no trouble getting the 32Kx8 24256. They're around $5 or $6 each in singles.
> The Compact Flash specifications can be found at:
>
http://www.compactflash.orgThe Compact Flash organization will only give the specification out to members.
Garth