I think it used unobtainium type RAM and ROM, being
all early Intersil CMOS, so it might be very difficult
to make an "authentic" one today even if you had a
6100. The 6100 was, given my limited knowledge, harder
to make truly PDP8/e compatible than the later 6120.
I've looked around for a ROM listing or front panel
code for the 6100/Intercept with no luck.
--- "Peter C. Wallace" <pcw(a)mesanet.com> wrote:
On Tue, 3 Sep 2002, Ethan Dicks wrote:
--- Mike <dogas(a)bellsouth.net> wrote:
>
> I just had to nominate the Intersil Intercept
Jr. to the early laptop
catagory,
Runs on batteries, fits in a lap.
;) - Mike: dogas(a)bellsouth.net
Are there plans out there anywhere? I doubt I'll
ever run across
a real one. They looked kinda cool back when I
was a kid, but at
the time, I didn't understand what it meant
to be
PDP-8-instruction-
set compatible (i.e., the implications of it, not
the literal sense
of "compatible").
It had, IIRC, some toggle switches, LEDs, and 4KW
of SRAM, right?
-ethan
The intercept had those, the Intercept Jr only had a
keypad and numeric LED
display. It only 256 or 1K (12 bit) words of RAM
ISTR
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