Michael wrote:
That mux/demux chip does look very nice. Forgive me for not saying so earlier (no one ever accused me of having the best social skills.).
Um.. ok, if you say so! As for the chip, credit belongs to the folks who originated its ancestor, the 4053. BTW it and the MAX4619 can be used for switching analog signals, including those that swing above
and below ground. I don't need that capability, but I do like how they put three SPDT elements in one package. You're guaranteed to find a use for all three because they're so versatile -- configurable as a wide range of gates (Inverter, AND, AND with one inverting input, OR, OR with one inverting input, etc) as well as a decoder or data selector.
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Does TTC (Throw Together Computer) have ROM in it or do you need a PC and the CPLD boot-loader to boot it up? Also, does TTC have an address decoder and any I/O chips?
No -- no address decoder and no I/O chips. And the CPLD is mounted on a breakout board that mounts onto a pair of wire-wrap headers on TTC itself. Besides providing a wiring interface, this also makes the breakout detachable; ie, recyclable for another project. The 8-pin header on top is for programming, and there's also a small prototyping area -- with fewer holes than I would prefer, but holes are budgeted, and the proto area (a low priority) is where I went broke! The entire breakout project was an afterthought, riding on the coattails of an unrelated PCB order.
Presently TTC does rely on a host PC for bootup, but that could change since the breakout board has a serial EEPROM (and an oscillator footprint, not yet populated when the photo was taken). The CPLD ( CY37064 ) is an obsolete part but I found some locally; also I have the Cypress programming software.
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In 1988 my 65C02 got six new registers and 44 new full-speed instructions!
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