On Jun 21, 2010, at 12:29 PM, David Griffith wrote:
QFP packages
Oh, yeah, sorry. Been a long night.
It should be noted that the original design ideals, and for that matter what makes the
P112 cool for a lot of people, is the design as it sits. It's a very easy to build
kit, requiring only the assembly of discretes and a couple of IC sockets. I've built
P112's in an evening.
If you want a more "traditional", retro-appropriate design, check out N8VEM.
He's built a pretty awesome through-hole system that uses individual boards for things
like the controller, disk I/O, etc. Heck, there's even ways to make it S-100 if that
tickles your fancy.
P112 was (I believe) designed to be mounted to a 3 1/2" floppy drive and provide a
functional full-featured CP/M computer by itself with said floppy drive and a serial
terminal. It's not the be-all end-all of CP/M SBC designs.. in fact, it sometimes
leaves a lot to be desired from a true hard-core CP/M-ists stance. However, as an
introduction to SBCs, and as a retrocomputing project, the P112 is exactly what it
purports to be.