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132 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 696
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Title: HPR0696: MrGadgets Path toward Linux
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0696/hpr0696.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 01:03:37
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---
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Oh
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Hello, this is Mr. Gadgett again, and I guess this is my second segment for hashbub
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look radio talking about kind of the history of computers.
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It's not my first computer, because I already talked about that my 1802 cause back
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else, but this is a continuation of the early days of micro computing and the
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computers that I owned during that the start of the computer revolution.
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So phoning it in again for Kansas City, and the second computer I guess that I really
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owned past the cause back elf was a 6502 base computer, and you know of course the
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6502, the 6800, and the Z80 were really the ones that were in competition at this
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particular point.
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This is the, oh a couple of years after the initial 80008 base computers, so the Z80 was
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a popular computer and had a lot of S100 bus computers.
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The S100 bus was an early bus that was available for plug-in cards and things like that.
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By this time we're talking about mostly computers that were going to be computers that you
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could use with a keyboard, they'd have a composite video output that you could use with
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a monitor.
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You no longer had to have that teletype machine in order to save and even load a program
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in.
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It was a higher level language kind of a program, even assembly language.
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And so we progressed along there about this time as when the Apple 1 came up and it was
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a kit computer of course with the steam, so I was the act in jobs there in California,
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the California Computing, you know, home group computer club there in the San Francisco
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Bay area.
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And there were several S100s, I remember one that was called the Saul 20, and oh man,
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I left it after that Saul 20, but there's no way I was going to be able to afford that.
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So there's another episode I'm going to talk about probably about why I got into computing
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in the first place given the fact that I have a music degree, but I was working in the
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recording studio at the University of Missouri Conservatory of Music and we had a pretty
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extensive mode synthesizer, big wall about, oh, five feet tall and eight feet wide of modules
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for the mode synthesizer.
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And to actually be able to have that be computer controlled, we did have a little bit later
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than the Saul 20 and everything like that, but somewhere around this time, 77, 78, somewhere
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in there, they got a Commodore PET computer, Commodore being very familiar with a lot of you
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I think because you know the Commodore Big 20 or Commodore 64 were your first computers.
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Well this was a precursor to that, it was an all-in-one computer, it looked like a terminal,
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you know it had the tube and the keyboard all-in-one with the computer board in there, all-ah,
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the model three radio shack and all those kinds of things.
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The radio shack model one had come out by now, I never had the money for a radio shack
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model one, although I did do a lot of programming on it because there was one store in the
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city area that actually had a model one in the store that you could actually go in and
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see it.
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It was a franchise store and the guy who owned the franchise's brother-in-law had bought
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it, he had convinced him to leave it in the store and he would program it to do inventory
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control for him for his business.
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Still cassette, cassette had come on for saving in and storing a program, so that was a big
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improvement over the old punch tape or having to enter it in by hand every single time.
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I actually owned a Commodore programmable calculator, a lot of us, the programmable calculators
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were the first things that you had that you could actually program that had a keyboard
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in a display.
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I had an early Commodore programmable calculator that was a reasonable cost and got that
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as a birthday present.
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So there was that Zic, I mean sorry, that Commodore PET computer, it had a special bus that had
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the capability of controlling instruments like laboratory instruments and things like
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that.
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That's why we had that in the recording studio, we could use that to control some instrumentation
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that we had as part of that MOG lab and things like that.
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So I had access to those, but the actual first computer that I had with a keyboard and
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the video built in and all that kind of stuff that I could afford was a Ohio scientific
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computer and it was 6502 based.
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As I said, there was a 6800, the 6502 and the 80 and this one happened to be based on
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the 6502 and it had the keyboard, it kind of looked like a large electric typewriter,
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but the back part didn't have a printer included in it.
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In fact, it had the computer board and all those kinds of things.
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You took up a cassette to load and save programs and it had a video out or a video monitor.
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So I managed to scrounge enough money together to afford a Ohio scientific and could use
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that to program in basic, taught myself basic and eventually got myself a job for the
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local Ohio scientific computer dealer here in town writing programs for the Ohio scientific
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systems and selling, you know, being a salesman and his little storefront operation that
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he operated here in Kansas City.
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So that was my second computer that I actually owned and eventually I got a Radio Shack
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Color computer when it came out, it was a 6809, so it was a 6800 based computer.
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The 6500 and 6800 series computers were very similar to one another.
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There was some kind of commonality, I forget exactly what it was and the original development
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of those.
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So the instructions that's very similar, the actual layout of, you know, how the CPU worked
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and how everything worked in the system were very, very similar.
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The Z80 was a completely different kind of an animal, it was a different kind of a thing.
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So the 6809 had the same advantage of the Cosmic Elter, a few things kind of built into
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it, made it a little bit easier and fewer parts counts, those were talking about discrete
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parts and, you know, dual inline package parts back then, so they'd take up a lot of room
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on your board and there were fewer parts that were necessary in order to design a 6809
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as opposed to a 6800, which was the original Motorola processor that came out.
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6800 was Motorola and I forget who it was, it made to 6500.
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The pet had that 6500 computer and the color computer that had the Radio Shack, by then
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I had red, you know, my first byte magazines taught myself everything I do about computers.
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I love reading of magazines taught myself programming and eventually made by living as a computer
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programmer also taught. And so there was one other computer I thought that was a note here in
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this transitional phase of these computers that were pre, you know, PC, right, pre-IBM PC,
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advanced thoughts and all that kind of stuff in the early days. And that was earlier than even
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the Commodore pet. There was a small single board computer called the Kim, the KIM, forget what
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that stood for. Anyway, the Kim was also a 6500 base computer and it was kind of similar to
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the Cosmac else because it had a little hex pad to enter in programs and little LED displays
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that were actually started to the board to give you some output and things like that.
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And it was a single board computer. It was a lot better than the Cosmac also because of the
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expandability of it. It was a nice single board computer. It was designed as a single board computer
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and you could, you had some good input output from that and everything like that. I found one of
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those used out east of Kansas City and drove out there to purchase that and I found that in
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the paper, I think, you know, this was before the internet. So I found an advertising that he
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had it for sale and purchased that from him. And this is oh, not quite 20 miles east of Kansas City,
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15 miles or so. drove into town to go to one of my best friends in college, shoes house and show him
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my Kim computer that I had just bought my single board computer. And he talked me out of it,
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and I own that computer for about three hours, I think, maybe a little bit less than that because
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I bought it from the guy who I bought it from used and then I sold it to my friend and he eventually
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used that and put it into his keyboard that he had for his PAI, a synthesizer, which was a bunch
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of modules that you could build by hand and build your own synthesizer from scratch. And he had
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put together all these modules for the synthesizer, he worked in a recording studio with me and
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with the most synthesizer and all that kind of stuff and this was kind of like the poor man's version
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of that might call in a whole episode on early days of synthesizers. But he used it and bounded it
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in his keyboard and then used that to provide MIDI control to his synthesizer. This was, you know,
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the actual keyboard that he had for his PAI was a resistive keyboard. You pushed down the key
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at a certain point and that would short out a resistive strip and whatever the resistance was,
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was the equivalent of the voltage, which was controlled the oscillator, which would be the pitch.
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And so he had no way to feed in computerized kinds of things. So with the Kim, he could actually
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feed in and control the voltages with the computer. He'd have programmable tunes that he could do.
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He had a sequencer and he even had MIDI, which is the standard input output for synthesizers that
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he could do through that Kim computer. So it lived a good life and it performed well over several
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years for him. But I only owned that computer for about three hours, like I say. So I can't really
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say how great the Kim was as a single board computer from direct usage just from watching how it
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was used. Anyway, I think that will conclude things for the second episode of the history of computing
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pre-dawspree IBM PC computing here. This was Mr. Gadgets and I think the next one that I'm going to
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call in is my path towards Linux, which oddly enough it was going to be related to the color computer.
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And I'll leave that as a teaser. We'll talk to you next time. Be careful out here on the technological
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frontier. This is Mr. Gadgets, your trailblazer out here and I'll be looking at a path for you here by now.
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Thank you for listening to H.P.R. sponsored by Carol.net. So head on over to C-A-R-O dot N-E-T for all of us in need.
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