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Super Jamie

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  1. I recently read about MicroBee Z80-based microcomputers being remade with modern features like SD Card, ethernet and dual processors.

    For the home hobbyist, it appears microcomputing has never died. I had a friend who used to make all sorts of things with PICAXE controllers and of course these days there's Arduino which has a large following.

    For those who want something less "embedded system" and more "conventional computer", the home-made Maximite seems to have become the de-facto standard with several SoC clones available. This little thing runs a BASIC interpreter on a 32-bit 80MHz CPU and also has USB, host serial, PS2 keyboard, VGA out and SD Card storage.

    All these little things amaze me. They sound so cool and seem to have a world of nostalgia in store. I've always wanted to get one except I had nothing to actually *do* with it.


    Lately, a workmate came across someone who had the ThinkGeek Binary Clock on their desk. I love the idea of binary clocks but the "Binary Coded Decimal" of the ThinkGeek clock is stupid. I prefer "True Binary" like this guy's clock which he hacked into the middle of an old hard drive.

    So, sometime in the next year or two I hope to make a binary clock which is powered by either USB or PoE, and uses its host power to communicate to an NTP server. Libraries and interfaces exist for the Arduino to do all this, the rest is just me learning to code and putting it all together.


    Do any of you guys play around with old micro/embedded computers like these?

    1. printz

      printz

      This blog looks really motivating. I've been thinking lately about trying to make robots, which obviously require an embedded software to make them think, but looking for motors sucks, they're expensive. Maybe I'll settle with making portable little computers, even though I'm a bit nervous about my ability for the miniature soldering I'll have to make.

    2. Super Jamie

      Super Jamie

      You could always make little budget robots out of floppy drive motors and generally cheap old throwaway stuff? What would you build robots to do?

      I'm leaning more towards functionally modern microcomputers. Some guy has ported an old 2BSD tree to the Maximite.

      It's amazing to think that what was once done on a fridge-sized mini mainframe can now be done better on a single chip, built by a hobbyist at home with a soldering iron and a serial cable.

      However the PIC32 "uClinux Challenge" issued by MicrochipC (the manufacturer) in 2007 remains unanswered. That Microbee actually runs uClinux on a Freescale CPU which is an extension of the M68K.

      I think I'll get a Raspberry Pi when they come out. 700MHz ARM, 256Mb RAM, ethernet, VGA, USB2, good enough to run 1808p video or Quake 3. That's so awesome.

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