Everything about Processor Technology totally explained
Bob Marsh founded
Processor Technology Corporation (a
microcomputer company) in April 1975.
Bob Marsh,
Lee Felsenstein and
Gordon French started designing the
Sol-20 Terminal Computer in June 1975. The SOL-20 utilized the
Intel 8080 8-bit
microprocessor chip, running at 2 MHz. The SOL-20 consisted of a main
motherboard (PCB) mounted at the bottom of the case, and a 5 slot
S-100 bus card cage. The main PCB consisted of the CPU, memory, video display, I/O circuits. Inside the case included power supply, fan, and keyboard. The sides of case are solid oiled
walnut wood, and blue painted steel. An external
composite monitor screen was also needed. Processor Technology manufactured approximately 10,000 of their Sol-20 personal computers between
1977 and
1979. All Processor Technology products where available either assembled and tested, or as
electronic kits. Processor Technology also sold software on
Cassette tape. One side was CUTER format, and the other side was
Kansas City standard format.
Making Standards
Processor Technology also designed several
S-100 bus boards. The boards were meant to be compatible with the circuits of SOL-20. Most notable was the
VDM-1. The
Video Display Module 1 was the original video display interface for S-100 bus systems. The VDM-1 was the most popular for owners of S-100 bus systems, such as the
IMSAI 8080. The VDM-1 board created a brief
industry standard. The board generates sixteen 64-character lines in a large, easy-to-read, upper and lower case typeface on any standard
composite video monitor or a modified TV set. By utilizing a 1,024 byte (1K) segment of system memory, VDM-1 provides extremely fast operation. For example, any character on the screen can be accessed by the processor in microseconds. Once the processor provides the display status parameters, the VDM-1 can scroll its display upward or downward at a top speed of about 1000 lines per minute. The VDM-1 is versatile with fully programmable cursor positioning. It will display black-on-white or white-on-black, perfect for many of the first ever video games. The Processor Technology VDM-1 Video Board was a great improvement over using a
teletype machine or a serial attached terminals back in the glory days. It was the first
Memory-mapped I/O video boards that plugged directly into the
S-100 bus system.
S-100 bus boards designed by Processor Technology
- VDM-1 - Video Display Module Board
3P+S - Input/Output Module 3 Parallel plus 1 Serial Board
4KRA - 4K Static Memory Board
8KRA - 8K Static Memory Board
16KRA - 16K DRAM memory board
32KRA-1 - 32K DRAM memory board
CUTS - Tape I/O Interface Board, CUTER format and Kansas City standard format
2KRO - EPROM memory board
Software by Processor Technology
SOLOS
CUTER
SOLOS
ASSM 8080 assembler
BASIC/5 - 5K BASIC programming language
Extended Cassette Basic
ALS-8
EDIT 8080 Editor
8080 Chess
TREK-80 - Star Trek game
GamePack 1
GamePack 2
Further Information
Get more info on 'Processor Technology'.
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