Oscar
Experienced Member
Hi,
I posted a message two months ago during development, but now my KIM Uno is done…
It is a handheld KIM-I clone -- just to make sure: done as a non-profit hobby project.
It costs just $10 in parts, and for the next few weeks, I can send PCBs/kits at cost price to anyone who is interested in it. Shipping is $10-15 unfortunately, Mr. Postman is not so much non-profit. The PCB gerbers and firmware will remain on my web site if anyone wants to create the board afterwards.
The size of a calculator, it contains the original KIM-1, of course. But some hard/software extensions make this KIM-1 into a pretty effective 6502 programmable calculator, with non-volatile memory to keep code stored.
The idea was that I like coding in 6502, but I never have much use for it. Small calculation programs might be the answer.
Also, some of the best KIM-1 software I could find is built in to extra KIM-1 ROMs. So Microchess is there, and some programming tools like disassembler, etc.
Here is the site:
http://obsolescence.wix.com/obsolescence#!kim-uno-summary/c1uuh
And here's the subpage on the 6502 programmable calculator part of it:
http://obsolescence.wix.com/obsolescence#!kim-uno-calculator/cgru
Regards,
Oscar.
I posted a message two months ago during development, but now my KIM Uno is done…
It is a handheld KIM-I clone -- just to make sure: done as a non-profit hobby project.
It costs just $10 in parts, and for the next few weeks, I can send PCBs/kits at cost price to anyone who is interested in it. Shipping is $10-15 unfortunately, Mr. Postman is not so much non-profit. The PCB gerbers and firmware will remain on my web site if anyone wants to create the board afterwards.
The size of a calculator, it contains the original KIM-1, of course. But some hard/software extensions make this KIM-1 into a pretty effective 6502 programmable calculator, with non-volatile memory to keep code stored.
The idea was that I like coding in 6502, but I never have much use for it. Small calculation programs might be the answer.
Also, some of the best KIM-1 software I could find is built in to extra KIM-1 ROMs. So Microchess is there, and some programming tools like disassembler, etc.
Here is the site:
http://obsolescence.wix.com/obsolescence#!kim-uno-summary/c1uuh
And here's the subpage on the 6502 programmable calculator part of it:
http://obsolescence.wix.com/obsolescence#!kim-uno-calculator/cgru
Regards,
Oscar.