I have one of the NC4016 boards ( I forget which one ). I added a XT floppy controller and
a XT MFM disk controller. I made some other hardware for doing byte stuff faster. Using
address -1, I could access it faster as a short literal. I had a 8 bit barrel shifter
there. It came in handy for the XT controllers. The processor was fast enough that I had
to add delays to the code to the floppy controller. It would run faster than the floppy
controller could provide status. Still, I was using it with direct processor access and
the controller was really expected to be used with a DMA transfers in a XT computer. The
MFM hard drive controller was much easier to deal with.
National also had a bunch of stackable computer modules. One of these modules had the
NSC800 processor with a Forth ROM built in.
Rockwell liked Forth and used it quite a bit in their development system as well as
having it on their AIM 65 machines.
Dwight
________________________________
From: cctalk <cctalk-bounces at classiccmp.org> on behalf of TangentDelta via cctalk
<cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Sent: Sunday, October 25, 2020 5:29 PM
To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Subject: Re: R65F11
Rockwell also had an RSC-FORTH Kernel and development environment ROM set for the R6501Q,
which is a similar 6502-based processor meant for embedded applications.
http://www.smallestplcoftheworld.org/RSC-FORTH_User%27s_Manual.pdf
Here's the RSC-FORTH manual, which covers the different types of RSC-FORTH.