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164 lines
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Plaintext
164 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1669
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Title: HPR1669: New Retro Computing
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1669/hpr1669.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 06:42:46
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---
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This is HPR episode 1669 entitled New Retro Computing.
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It is hosted by Nibble and is about 18 minutes long.
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The summary is Nibble talks about building a micro-might companion.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15 that's HPR15.
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Hello, this is NY Bill and today I thought I'd talk to you guys about a kit I recently
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built.
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It's an electronics kit and it is called the micro-might companion.
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And what it is is it's a little bit bigger than an R pi.
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It runs for a peller chip and a pick chip and what it is is a basic computer.
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Yes, basic, like 10 print HPR20 go to 10, that kind of basic.
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I heard about this kit on the Retro Bits podcast.
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If anybody doesn't know, it's a podcast about Retro Computing and the good old days.
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Some episodes I really enjoy are they will interview some of the forefathers and the people
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that created everything back in the day.
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One that comes to mind that I really enjoyed was with Chuck Peddle, who was an engineer
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for Commodore.
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That was fun to hear him talk about his days.
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The recent show, show 147, he interviewed Jeff Ledger who created this micro-might.
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And by the end of the episode I was, they had me convinced I need to get one of these
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and fool about with it.
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It doesn't come out very often, I guess he does one when he can or when he has some content.
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But I leave it in beyond pod and every once in a while I'm surprised that there's a new
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Retro Bits to listen to, so it's just fun to hear about the old days.
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I started with a VIC-20 that I got for Christmas and maybe a year or so later I got a
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Commodore 64 and that was back in the good old days of getting on your BMX bike, throwing
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your disk drive in your backpack, drive over to friends houses and, you know, well, I guess
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that was like the sneaker net, I guess it was wears, but yeah, yeah, copy some disks.
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I still have a Commodore 64 and all the goodies down in the basement, I don't know why, I just
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kept it all these years and all those disks are still down there with, you know, you take
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some scissors and cut a notch in your five and a quarter floppies and then you can use
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the B side that the good old days.
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Anyways, I heard about this on Retro Bits, check it out if you're into it, I'll put a
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link in the show notes.
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So after listening to that Retro Bits episode, I ordered one of these boards just for fun,
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something to do, see what I can do with it, it'll, it was fun getting the soldering pin
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out again.
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I told some of the guys in the lug that, oh, I showed it to them, some of them said neat,
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oh, cool, and some of them said, what the heck are you going to do with basic, they were
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basically laughing at me, but the fun of this is putting it together for me, I'll see
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what I can do with it after, could be some fun things.
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I heard that it even does a Commodore 64 emulation mode, so that would be neat to see if I
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could somehow get the 1541 drive hooked into it and then load programs off those old
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floppies.
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So, building this thing, it's just a bare board and a bag full of parts, this would be a
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good kit for anybody that's somewhat new to soldering because it's all through all stuff,
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there's no really tiny surface mount stuff, all the resistors and capacitors are through
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all, they look, I guess they're quarter-watt, they're fairly small, but I mean, it's all,
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you can just all do it by hand, you don't need, well, actually I did get them like magnifying
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glass out a few times, maybe I'm getting old, but just, you know, you got to read the stripes
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on the side of the resistors and there are some really tiny capacitors, one of them you
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do have to get a magnifying glass out to see which side is plus.
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Okay, putting this thing together.
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I'll put in the show notes, well, I'll put a show, in the show notes a link to the board
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where you can get it if you care to get one.
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And then there are instructions on how to put it together.
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It's easy to follow along, don't do what I did, one of the first instructions says, don't
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put in the 28 pin dip socket until instructed to do so.
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There are three dip sockets, there's a small one, that's an 8 pin, there's a 28 pin,
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and there's a 40 pin.
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I don't know why, I did read the warning, but when I went over, I didn't count the pins
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and for some reason I grabbed the 8 pin socket and the 28 pin socket.
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The one I was not supposed to put in and I'll tell you why you shouldn't put it in yet
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because I did and I ran it to the problem.
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So it kind of goes step by step from the top of the board, you got power in, 7.5 volts,
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I had a, it doesn't come with a power brick, but I had in the basement one of those wall
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work power bricks where it has a little selector switch on the bottom.
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You can get these things at electronic stores, this one does from 3 volts, 4.5 volts, 6
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volts, 7.5 volts, and 9 volts.
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So that was perfect for the 7.5.
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I don't know why they're specifying 7.5 because you put in two voltage regulators while
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you're building it and you put in a 5 volt regulator and a 3.3 volt regulator.
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So I don't know why they needed the extra power, it's possible this can run off 5 volts,
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I haven't tried it.
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So sidering away and following the steps, you put in a whole series of resistors, there's
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a, that's interesting, oh that is strange, I kept hitting the microphone cable and it was
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putting all kinds of static up, I'll chop all this out, but I don't know if it's getting
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interference from something around the bench here or that was strange, anyways let me
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go back to what I was saying.
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Once again, you got power in on the left top of the board, PS2 keyboard, which I only
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have one left in the house, but I did dig that out of the basement, so I was okay there,
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it's got audio out which I haven't tried yet, I suppose I could throw some headphones
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in there, and then VGA out.
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So while you're soldering up, underneath the VGA is a whole series of resistors, you've
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got a crystal under that.
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Where underneath that is the 40 pin dip socket, which should go in in the beginning.
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So if you build this kit, put the small one in, put the big one in, and hold the medium
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one for last, then they have you put in the voltage regulators, you're kind of working your
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way down the board, then you get to the lower left hand corner where you have to put on the
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SD card reader.
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This is why you didn't want to put the 28 pin socket in because the SD card reader is the
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only surface mount component on the board, you can still do it with a normal tip soldering
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pin, I'm sure, but the problem is if you put that 28 pin dip socket in, you can't really
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reach in to the surface mount pins on the back of the SD card, and what I had to do was
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get out my skinny tip and go down in between the SD card and the 28 pin dip socket, and
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it kind of made for some messy soldering down there, and it kind of melted the side of
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the 28 pin dip socket.
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You'll be warned by the instructions, and you're just warned by me, don't put in this 28
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pin socket until you're told to.
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After putting in the SD card, you're ready for your first boot up, so you get a two gig
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or under SD card, which that was another thing I had trouble finding.
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The smallest ones I really have are four gigs here, and I got eight gigs, and you know,
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two two gig and under cards, but I asked my wife what was in her small camera, and it
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was an old two gig card, so I gave her one of my four gigs, and I took that two gig.
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You plug that in, plug in a monitor, a keyboard, boot it up, and you see kind of like a basic
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image.
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I think I took a picture, I'll put some pictures in the show notes and things.
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That just tells you it's ready to accept that pick chip, which will do all the computing.
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The rest of it is just kind of input and output.
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After you see that that's good, they just have you put on a few more components in the
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bottom, you do put in that 28 pin dip socket, you put the pick chip in there, and then
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along the bottom right is a breadboard, and three 16 socket pin outs, so you can get into
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some micro-controlling things with this.
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I haven't gotten too far into what I can do with this, I'm talking, I just finish actually
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soldering this, so maybe I can follow this up if I do anything interesting, software-wise
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with it, or build anything with this pin out and micro-controlling capability.
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There also seems to be a lot of, well not a lot, one, two, three, four, five, six spaces
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on the circuit board that are not populated, now I'm not sure, okay, they're marked.
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One says terminal, jb8, I don't know if they are like some type of j-tag interface.
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I did see mentioned, oh IR, here's, so it looks like I can get some extra parts and sticking
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here's an infrared port, I think this one, there's a j4, that, j4 and j8, they are probably
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joysticks, is there eight pin headers that aren't populated, so it looks like with some
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other, you know, parts you can just get off the shelf, you can do more with this thing.
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Oh, and there's, they did mention Wii, and there is a Wii mode connection, I don't have
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a Wii or a Wii mode, but yeah, somehow you can use that to control this thing.
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So after it was soldered it up, I plugged it all in and boom, it came up a basic prompt,
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it is very retro, the instructions point you to a drop box folder where you can download
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like binary bin files and I have to stop going because I have to, I realized doing
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HPRs that when I start talking a lot, I click, I don't know why, I just did it again,
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yeah, so a drop box, they'll send you to a folder where you can pull down binary files,
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they have some things you can run, I saw a Zork 1 in there, anybody remember text adventures,
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Zork 1 was in there, I saw a Frogger, I don't know how I would play Frogger unless I'd
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have to get these joy ports working.
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The other thing I might do with it is in one of my old, in my old HTPC case, which I don't
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really use anymore, but I ran Mythbox for quite a long time, it has a 7 inch VGA screen
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in it, it's touch screen, I won't be able to use the touch with this, but I could use
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that little screen and come out of this VGA port and build a very small like little enclosure
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for this and have a little tiny basic computer, that might be, might have to get into a little
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woodworking with that, that would be interesting, I'll click, in case this in some nice curly
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maple or something, a little rosewood, fancy retro computing, so there you have it, it's
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just a, I'm just jumping in quick to tell you guys about this kit, if anybody's interested
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in building one, there's links in the show notes, if you're listening to this and you
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haven't done an HPR this year, do one, because I hear the Q is like low or down to nothing.
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Alright, here's a new rule, do one HPR a year, if we do hit zero shows, you got to do two
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HPR zero, sorry, new rule, okay guys, maybe I'll come back in and talk about this micromite
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companion a little more from a software perspective, but until then, I'll talk to you guys later.
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