Tor wrote:
The showstopper for me (and I would have loved to build one of those now that I've moved to another part of the world and lost access to all my existing projects) is that display output is to TV..
Quote:
It's VGA or VGA, DVI and HDMI. No composite video in sight.
The Propeller chip used on the replica can output VGA, but it requires more pins than for NTCS or PAL and I suspect that there aren't enough free pins available for that - that's only a hunch though because I can't find a diagram on the site. But when Propellers have been used for similar purposes (e.g. the Propeddle) all of the pins get used quickly for all the glue logic that it handles.
I expect that Vince will put the schematics and firmware online, once the project gets along further.
As far as I understand, the Apple I used monochrome text-only video. Judging from the pictures, the TV-out interface on the Replica 1 TEN is implemented as a full 3-pin color TV interface (I see 1K, 560R and 220R resistors next to each other). For 6-bit color VGA you would need 8 pins, but for monochrome VGA, 3 pins are enough. You just need to replace those resistors by different values and connect them to the v.sync, h.sync and RGB outputs. And you need to change the software to use VGA frequencies of course but that's trivial I'm sure. Once I receive my 1TEN, I'll probably post a monochrome VGA hack on this board or on the Briel computers forum.
By the way, I never had a TV in my bedroom either. When I was in the Netherlands, I bought a 21" / 55cm stereo TV with teletext in 1994 for about 1500 Guilders (about the equivalent of $700 I think). When I emigrated to the USA, I bought a 21" stereo TV for $300.
Recently, prices for second-hand CRT TVs and monitors have fallen: Everyone wants flat screen TVs and monitors (they're not so different anymore, that's a good thing). I bought a 13" color TV for about $25, and an old black and white 4" TV (with CVBS input!) for $10 at the Goodwill store and I use them for my Propeddle project. Ironically, the small "pocket" flat screen TV I bought from Parallax for $80 for the same purpose, works a lot worse: lots of times it won't lock on to the signal ("No Signal") unless you feed it through a modulator, and because of the crappy pixel interpolation, the picture looks so miserable that it's unusable. The old 13" CRT is my favorite hobby TV. Money well spent!
===Jac