This is pretty awesome. Someone is working on a software emulation of my old computer from 1983.

This is pretty awesome. Someone is working on a software emulation of my old computer from 1983.

There was already one made about ten years ago to run in MAME but this new one tries to recreate the full hardware experience of using it. It’s still at an early alpha stage but it’s already looking pretty promising.

I have an ulterior motive in wanting to see this. I want to write new 8-bit software with it.

You can see a video of it working here:

https://www.facebook.com/michael.meskers.1/videos/pcb.715904752109137/2284686214937199/?type=3&theater&ifg=1

Explaining microprocessors to people in 1982-83

Explaining microprocessors to people in 1982-83

This illustration is a composite of sketches Ken Stone and I made to attempt to explain the workings of CPUs and machine code to hobbyists back in the early 80s.

This was published in issue 10 of Talking Electronics in early 83 to go with our TEC-1 computer kit. For a few years the TEC-1 was the cheapest, most accessible way for Australian hobbyists to enter the mysterious world of computing.

Before long of course that space would be filled with consumer systems that could actually do things that were useful apart from just learning how to program.

A cool thing I discovered this evening is that I am mentioned in Wikipedia for something I designed back in 1983.

A cool thing I discovered this evening is that I am mentioned in Wikipedia for something I designed back in 1983.

This was a Z80 based computer kit that sold in Australia for about $100. I made the original circuit and programmed the ROM, my friend Ken Stone designed the final PCB art and got it ready in a kit form for Talking Electronics magazine.

I was amused to discover that the design was even knocked off and cloned. http://www.flickr.com/photos/mrbill/sets/739140/

Fun times.Â