I was wondering if a recently made machine intended to be used as a
"classic" computer qualifies as a "classic" here. Here are some
examples:
P112: A Z180 single board computer still available brand-new which runs
ZSDOS and probably straight CP/M too.
Replica I: An Apple I clone with modern parts replacing the discontinued
parts of the original
SBC1620: Uses the Harris 1620 CPU to create something roughly equivalent
to a PDP8e. An optional near clone of the PDP8e front panel is/was also
available. Has an IDE port to use modern hard drives or CF cards for
storage.
Other machines to consider are completely new, but are designed and built
with classic computing in mind. Specifically I mean the half-dozen or so
machines built from discrete TTL chips.
--
David Griffith
dgriffi at
cs.csubak.edu
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