Sol Terminal Color Photo, and PROMs
Corey Cohen
AppleCorey at optonline.net
Thu Jan 12 05:25:42 CST 2017
The keyboard looks like a variant of the keyboard on display at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London right now attached to the Apple-1. It was a giant pain to get it working correctly. I didn't have good schematics so had to create a ton of notes and pseudo schematics using a ohm meter, scope and logic analyzer. It was very satisfying to get it working :-)
The V&A keyboard is KTC-065-01466.
There is a story on the sol-20 prototype proms, if I recall correctly, in the book "Fire in the valley".
Cheers,
Corey
corey cohen
uǝɥoɔ ʎǝɹoɔ
> On Jan 12, 2017, at 12:50 AM, Brad H <vintagecomputer at bettercomputing.net> wrote:
>
> Hey guys,
>
>
>
> Does anyone know if any color photos exist of the Sol 'Intelligent Terminal'
> that appeared on the cover of Popular Electronics, July 1976? I just
> discovered that that Keytronics keyboard I bought on ebay (the one parted
> out from a mystery 8080 terminal of some sort) is the same one they used for
> the PE cover unit. I found the artwork tonight on sol20.org for the
> original PCB. If I could find a color photo it'd at least be possible to
> build a replica of that unit someday.
>
>
>
> I was curious too if anyone knew the story behind the four optional PROM ICs
> that could be installed on the board. The article only says 'Optional,
> write in for details'. Can't find any more info than that anywhere. I
> understand Processor Technology sort of dodged around PE's reluctance to
> publish any more computer articles, and I'm wondering if the terminal could
> be turned into a full blown computer with the aid of those PROMs.
>
>
>
> To refresh - this is the keyboard I bought.
> https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B4pq0-BHd2x6eHNhTWVGZkhxRFk/view?usp=sharin
> g
>
>
>
> Definitely seems to be the same one - just different colors and legends on
> the keys themselves.
>
>
>
> Brad
>
More information about the cctalk
mailing list