Oneironaut wrote:
I would be interested in seeing the KIM-1 reader. Did it handle 64K?
Well, there are two readers, one very fast and the other, seen below, moderately slow (stepper motor powered). Both use parallel interfaces, and theoretically the host computer's software could ask for any amount of data. But these particular readers don't have reels, meaning they're somewhat of a nuisance if you frequently need to load large programs (ie, long tapes). But for occasional use they're fine, even with a long-ish tape.
The infrastructure I created for myself revolved around a Friden Flexowriter given to me by a client. I used to send EBCDIC
(not ASCII) characters in parallel to a 6522 attached to the KIM-1, and miniature relays output the 90VDC levels which drove the solenoids in the Friden. The latter served me both as a printer and as a paper tape punch.
I used the stepper motor powered reader, and IIRC it too could connect to the 6522. But there was also a highly perverse hookup that hijacked the KIM-1 keypad matrix. Somehow I had a 32x8 TTL PROM that input EBCDIC from the reader and simulated the corresponding keypresses on the KIM. So, if there was some frequently used ditty that required me to enter a long, tiresome sequence on the KIM keypad, I could instead just type that on the Friden
once, and it'd output a tape that would effortlessly cause the KIM to hallucinate the sequence as often as desired.
I know it sounds Rube Goldberg-ish, and I may as well admit there was "a little bit"
of youthful creativity (ie, problem seeking) at work. OTOH I had no access to non-volatile storage other than cassette tape, so the system
was genuinely useful to a degree. Sorry if I've gone overboard with the OT reminiscing!
-- Jeff
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In 1988 my 65C02 got six new registers and 44 new full-speed instructions!
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