Introduce yourself
Re: Introduce yourself
(There's a BigEd lurking in those photos too! And at least one other member here...)
- BigDumbDinosaur
- Posts: 9427
- Joined: 28 May 2009
- Location: Midwestern USA (JB Pritzker’s dystopia)
- Contact:
Re: Introduce yourself
mvk wrote:
Follow-up from viewtopic.php?p=62585#p62585
Nice to meet you. I've been lurking here for a while. I will give Gigatron links in the text below. Much has been written about it elsewhere already...
BigEd wrote:
(Great links mvk, thanks - would love to hear more about the gigatron work, maybe in Introduce Yourself?)
x86? We ain't got no x86. We don't NEED no stinking x86!
Re: Introduce yourself
1024MAK wrote:
Hello everyone.
...
When I was at school, back in the 1980s, I was interested in electricity.
...
Mark
...
When I was at school, back in the 1980s, I was interested in electricity.
...
Mark

Bill
Re: Introduce yourself
I did something like that once. Quite a buzz. I was upstairs at the time, which might well have reduced the danger. I was six or seven, I would think.
- BigDumbDinosaur
- Posts: 9427
- Joined: 28 May 2009
- Location: Midwestern USA (JB Pritzker’s dystopia)
- Contact:
Re: Introduce yourself
BillO wrote:
1024MAK wrote:
Hello everyone.
...
When I was at school, back in the 1980s, I was interested in electricity.
...
Mark
...
When I was at school, back in the 1980s, I was interested in electricity.
...
Mark

x86? We ain't got no x86. We don't NEED no stinking x86!
Re: Introduce yourself
Hey guys, new to the forum. My interest in electronics and computers began in about 5th grade when we got our first computer... a Packard Bell 486SX... ooooh yeah. We had Apple IIe at school, but this was the first computer for our family. Fast forward several years, I ended up earning my BS in Electrical Engineering with a concentration in Signals & Communications. I'm not an engineer by trade... I entered the Navy and fly fighters for a living. I did get my Amateur Extra ham radio license several years ago, which reinvigorated my interest in electronics. I love messing with PIC microcontrollers and playing with digital modes on the HF bands. Lately I've picked up FPGAs, playing with the Mojo v3 and now the Nexys 4 DDR. My interest in the 6502 came about when I decided to build an entire soft-computer on the Nexys. My current project is using a 65C02 IP to build an entire 8-bit SOC. I have a few articles published in Nuts & Volts, maybe you've read them!
- BigDumbDinosaur
- Posts: 9427
- Joined: 28 May 2009
- Location: Midwestern USA (JB Pritzker’s dystopia)
- Contact:
Re: Introduce yourself
KJ6MSG wrote:
Hey guys, new to the forum.
Quote:
...I entered the Navy and fly fighters for a living.
Quote:
My current project is using a 65C02 IP to build an entire 8-bit SOC.
x86? We ain't got no x86. We don't NEED no stinking x86!
Re: Introduce yourself
BigDumbDinosaur wrote:
Welcome to our 6502 world.
BigDumbDinosaur wrote:
That sounds interesting. Have you got it running yet? Have you any plans to build a single-board computer with an actual 65C02?
- hoglet67's modified Arlet core (65C02) running at 50 MHz
- 32 KB RAM (Xilinx Block RAM)
- 16 KB ROM (Xilinx Block RAM)
- 80x25 16-color text display (720x400 @ 70 Hz)
- Full IBM Code Page 437 character set
- UART adjustable to 1.5625 Mbaud
- ROM resident monitor capable of memory dump, memory write, and running a program
I may build a SBC on real hardware, but right now I'm focusing on my soft-core implementation. I spent a few hundred dollars on that Nexys board... I'm going to get the most out of it that I can!
-
ElEctric_EyE
- Posts: 3260
- Joined: 02 Mar 2009
- Location: OH, USA
Re: Introduce yourself
KJ6MSG wrote:
...I entered the Navy and fly fighters for a living....
Re: Introduce yourself
ElEctric_EyE wrote:
Like currently fly? F-22? YF-23? ooohhhhh I'm super jealous
-
ElEctric_EyE
- Posts: 3260
- Joined: 02 Mar 2009
- Location: OH, USA
Re: Introduce yourself
KJ6MSG wrote:
ElEctric_EyE wrote:
Like currently fly? F-22? YF-23? ooohhhhh I'm super jealous
You should post your project, whenever you get spare time. Super cool...
Re: Introduce yourself
ElEctric_EyE wrote:
You should post your project, whenever you get spare time. Super cool...
-
ElEctric_EyE
- Posts: 3260
- Joined: 02 Mar 2009
- Location: OH, USA
Re: Introduce yourself
BillO wrote:
1024MAK wrote:
Hello everyone.
...
When I was at school, back in the 1980s, I was interested in electricity.
...
Mark
...
When I was at school, back in the 1980s, I was interested in electricity.
...
Mark

He survived...
- BigDumbDinosaur
- Posts: 9427
- Joined: 28 May 2009
- Location: Midwestern USA (JB Pritzker’s dystopia)
- Contact:
Re: Introduce yourself
KJ6MSG wrote:
Will do! I'm just finishing up the PS/2 keyboard interface and then I'll publish my local git repository to Github. I'll let you guys know when I do!
x86? We ain't got no x86. We don't NEED no stinking x86!
Re: Introduce yourself
ElEctric_EyE wrote:
BillO wrote:
1024MAK wrote:
Hello everyone.
...
When I was at school, back in the 1980s, I was interested in electricity.
...
Mark
...
When I was at school, back in the 1980s, I was interested in electricity.
...
Mark

He survived...
It’s ALIVE!!!!
.
Speaking of receiving electric shocks (where it hurts, not counting lesser tingles you get off ungrounded SMPSUs and such like), so far I’ve been shocked twice by 240V AC mains, and at least four times by 110V AC mains. None intentionally mind. And with no injuries.
So ‘kids’ don’t this at home (or anywhere else). Unless you work in an electrical industry and have been properly trained so that when working live, you know what not to touch.
Mark