On Apr 25, 1:39, Tony Duell wrote:
Allison wrote:
> I have: 1802, SC/MP, 6800, 6809, NEC D78PG11, 8748/9, 8751, 8080/8085,
> z80, z180, z280, z8002, z8001, 808x, 8018x, 80286, 80386, 80486 and the
> micro version of minis 6100(pdp-8), 6120(PDP-8+EMA) TI9900, PDP11(T-11,
> F11, J-11).
Let's see how I do :
Ones I have : (possibly embedded, but I've designed machines round a
number of these...)
SC/MP, 8008, 8080, 1802, 8085, Z80, 64180, 8086, 8088, 80286, 80386,
80486,
68000, 68010, 68020, 68040, T212 (or maybe T225),
T425, T801, T805,
PIC16C84, PIC17C42, F11, J11, 6502, 6809, 6800, 6803, 4040, 8048 (and
8035), 8051 (and 8031, 8032), ARM2, ARM3, R2000, 6120, Z8001, 32016, 2901
etc (does that count), 3001 etc (ditto), and doubtless more that I've
forgotten...
I can't beat that...
8008, 8085, 8088, 8086, 80186, 80286, 80386, 80486, V20, Z80, Z8, Z8001
(but in foam, not a system), 6502, 65C12, 6800, 6809 (in foam), 68HC11,
8032, 8035, 8048, 68000, 68010, 68020, assorted PICs, ARM2, ARM3, R4600,
Sparc, 2901, D11, F11, T11, J11, 6100, and probably a few embedded "things"
and others I've forgotten, but I wouldn't claim to have programmed all of
them.
However, what's surprising about these lists is not what's there, but
what's missing.
What's a 3001, BTW?
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Dept. of Computer Science
University of York