Richard wrote:
In article <20060129113221.0f1a2355.sastevens at
earthlink.net>,
Scott Stevens <sastevens at earthlink.net> writes:
The cheapest, most common programmers from the
mid-80s onward
should fill your need. Nothing special from Intel is needed.
Though collecting Intel development hardware as an end unto
itself is a worthy pursuit...
How many of you collect development kit stuff like evaluation boards,
in circuit emulators, cross compilers, etc.
<raises hand> I DO! </raises hand>
I have a few Intel MDS Series II systems. All but one work. And I
recently actually used one of them with an ICE-80 to troubleshoot a cpu
board.
I have used ICEs for a 6809 and they were pretty
expensive iron for
the time (1986) and most companies I know rented them for the duration
of a project rather than purchase them. Which makes me wonder...
where do the rental companies discard their outdated inventory?
The ICE hardware certainly was expensive. And I know that at one time I
used to get "for sale" flyers from some of the rental companies with
their old development hardware. Prices were affordable by the time they
were getting rid of them, but still not "by the pound" prices that some
folks here find.