alkopop79 wrote:
The idea of this topic is to discuss the feasibility of a DIY singleboard computer for educational purposes...
By DYI, do you mean the user would be getting a pile of parts, which s/he would have to assemble by soldering and/or wire-wrapping? If that is the case, this is something that Daryl (8Bit) has already done with his SBC series. The ancestral unit in his series was 65C02 powered, and about as basic as one could get and still have a functional piece of hardware.
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As it have been already discussed in the UK media, the lack of understanding concepts of technology has had a negative impact on the society, the environment and the computer sciences/engineering education.
This is something that I have been saying for quite some time (but keep getting flack because I'm supposedly "rubbishing" someone's choices). To put it into an automotive perspective, most drivers known nothing about what goes on under the hood (bonnet) or inside an automatic transmission, but are able to drive the vehicle. However, anyone who wishes to maintain and repair their car has to have some degree of technical knowledge. Ditto for using a computer.
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...the kit could fill the vacuum left by the Arduino microcontroller and the Raspberry Pi SBC. These devices have attracted a large crowd yet they do not explain how computers, processors and other digital hardware work.
Careful! You might get speared for pointing out this slightly unpleasant fact.
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Needless to say, the idea of such kit brings many questions: PCB or WW?
Although a kit based upon a wire-wrapped foundation may be less expensive, WW may require a degree of skill that not all prospective purchasers could bring to bear. Of course, said purchasers may be equally uncomfortable handling and soldering small devices. So it would be cost most likely that would dictate how to proceed. That said, PCBs in quantity can be quite inexpensive in terms of unit cost. For example, PCBs to build my POC V1 computer would cost about 14.80 USD each in a quantity of 100. Compare that to the cost of perf board, wire-wrap sockets, tooling, etc., and it's most likely a wash or possibly favorable toward the PCB approach.
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Display and keyboard or just serial port?
I took the latter approach with the POC V1 unit, but built in two serial ports (the cost difference of two versus one is minimal). That said, a console display with keyboard may be "friendlier" for a prospective purchaser who doesn't have access to either a dumb terminal or terminal emulation software running on another computer. As I continue to mull over POC V2 I am thinking about built-in console hardware, especially since a
reasonably economical solution to driving a VGA display exists.