Notice. New forum software under development. It's going to miss a few functions and look a bit ugly for a while, but I'm working on it full time now as the old forum was too unstable. Couple days, all good. If you notice any issues, please contact me.
|
Forum Index : Microcontroller and PC projects : RIP Z80 micros
Author | Message | ||||
Malibu Senior Member Joined: 07/07/2018 Location: AustraliaPosts: 228 |
An Interesting video on the Z80 history and the end of life run-out. John |
||||
Mixtel90 Guru Joined: 05/10/2019 Location: United KingdomPosts: 6776 |
Excellent! Unfortunately there was no mention of the first UK home computer that had a proper keyboard and could be hooked up to a TV as the display as standard, the Nascom-1. This appeared at a time when the very cheapest home computers of any use whatsoever (i.e. not switches and LEDs) came from the US and cost a hell of a lot by the time they hit UK soil. The Nascom-1 came as a kit and cost £197 IIRC. That was still a lot of money in 1976/77 but at least it was less than a year's earnings. It's almost unheard of now as it wasn't designed for either games or business computing - and you had to be able to build it yourself (at first anyway, it was available ready-assembled later). Relative to the size of the UK market at the time there were a lot sold and many UK computer engineers started their careers with one of these. A video from the "wrong" side of the pond. And a nice techy one Here Edited 2024-10-10 17:12 by Mixtel90 Mick Zilog Inside! nascom.info for Nascom & Gemini Preliminary MMBasic docs & my PCB designs |
||||
stanleyella Guru Joined: 25/06/2022 Location: United KingdomPosts: 2118 |
When I worked in the arcade industry in the 70's, the company sold games made by universal, which where rip offs of games of the time but all their boards were Z80. ram failure was common and hard to desolder. Atari used 6502 |
||||
Malibu Senior Member Joined: 07/07/2018 Location: AustraliaPosts: 228 |
There's probably a few here that would remember ETI magazine from a few years ago, and my first computer was the ETI680 in the 1979 edition. It had the all the latest technology - a Z80 cpu using an S-100 bus. For a good read, see Page 30 ... Makes me want to build one again Edit: There's a lot of good scans Here if you feel like browsing... Edited 2024-10-11 05:48 by Malibu John |
||||
stanleyella Guru Joined: 25/06/2022 Location: United KingdomPosts: 2118 |
retro! ads that are before aliexpress. good read |
||||
Goksteroo Senior Member Joined: 15/03/2021 Location: AustraliaPosts: 114 |
My first computer was a Dick Smith Super-80 kit computer kit. I got lots of soldering experience, an inkling of basic programming and later and an introduction into Z80 M/Code programming - good times. Edited 2024-10-11 13:19 by Goksteroo |
||||
Marcel27 Regular Member Joined: 13/08/2024 Location: NetherlandsPosts: 53 |
Nice to read that old ETI stuff. Have found also a lot of old Elektor magazines on the net and when I have nothing to do I scan through them for inspiration. If you use AI, you lose your mind. |
||||
Malibu Senior Member Joined: 07/07/2018 Location: AustraliaPosts: 228 |
I was a bit premature in parsing the url that I found, so here's one with a whole collection of interesting scans in a more friendly HTML format... World Radio History I was browsing a few editions of various magazines and thought how everything is still pretty relevent today Sure, the parts are updated, but the projects could still easily be built Note: Some of the magazines are not available through 'the front door' because of copyright, but can still be accessed through 'back door' (Even a few editions of 'Radio, Television and Hobbies') Edited 2024-10-12 16:55 by Malibu John |
||||
MaryB_MN Newbie Joined: 03/08/2024 Location: United StatesPosts: 5 |
Memories of all the old computer hardware I have owned over the years... Altair 8800 I still have but probably need to refurb it before power up... |
||||
Print this page |