There are several pcbs you can get made to house the Ben Eater circuits. Also the backplane would take about 2.5 hours to solder together. You would probably want to run romWBW so I think the bigger kits would be a better choice
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6) the Z80 while a product , you might say was a fork / enhanement of the 8080. To differentiate they came up with new syntax for instructions e.g MOV for 8080 is LD in Z80.
So while the code reads differently the overall structure is the same, since the z80 is backwards compatible.
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3) Unique selling point I came up with is that it's the perfect confidential data computer for nuclear launch codes, formula for calculating prime numbers log (n), NOC lists, remember Mission Impossible.
4) So my journal / diary idea: well there's always dbase 2. I wonder if 3 will work. I guess dbase IV is out of the question. Dbase 2 seems limited to 1000 characters a record. http://www.retroarchive.org/cpm/dbase/dbase.htm
I guess I should be looking for CP/M 2.2 80 binaries? If keeping important data
I'm a potential RC2014 builder and user. Daniel age 52. I went to the Centre of Computing History in Cambridge last year the Retro Computer festival and saw the RC2014 with the nice blue front panel case. A few nice points:
- Found Ben Eaters youtube feed on building a 6502 on breadboards I thought that's nice but it won't exactly be very useful when finished. A plus for you, you do end up with something nice and robust when finished. Also made me think has anyone made a clock module with stepping ability?
- There are other kits of course but haven't seen anything with the back plane idea which I think is great. I see folks even making a ZX Spectrum and 6502 module and even a ez80 module though that one is an oven job to solder.
So a few questions.1) The biggy was all the soldering worth it? That 12 slot board looks great but what alot of joints. For me I can imagine there will be joy if you get it to see the mandelbrot set rendered on a computer you've built or play chess or Conways game of life.Is it one of the devices you would grab in a fire? I could well see that.
2) I'm trying to decide on the Mini II and a back plane 5/8 combo or go for the Zed. What do you use it for when done? The extra slots I mean.
3) Has anyone wired up a temperature and humidity sensor? It strikes me as a great setup for a datalogger. But then perhaps it's overpowered for that. I researched but it doesn't play nicely I gather with SPI and I2C?
5) I was born in 72 I started with Atari Basic actually. I do know C but was never of the Forth, COBOL era. Assembly language has some appeal if it progresses nicely is an 80286 containing instructions from the 8080 and hence Z80 series?
6) How far can the knowledge take you would you recognise instructions from a 486, Pentium in the Z80?
7) Anyone put inside the case? Is it a joyous thing to have on your desk? What do you use the LCD for?
I have been contemplating the FPGA route but think I'll probably miss out on a lot of old charm and satisfcation that route. I'd better stop it's a message already.

Hi, Alan,Blimey are you the Alan Cox of Linux fame bearded kernel maintianer sure look like him with the beard :-).
I've been costing the way of building it gradually as recommended by a couple of people here compared to going Zed pro.Turns out it's only £24 if can daisy chain 2 x 8 back planes together and you don't have a need to run an old line printer.Did you write that up anywhere?