Devices: Retro, Mini PCs, Raspberry P, and More
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Apollo Lake system integrates up to 6x GbE, 2x LAN bypass and 2x SFP
The ICS-I370 is a fanless industrial cyber security network appliance powered by the Intel Atom E3900 CPU series. Lanner's ICS-I370 also includes 1x M.2 B-key for LTE/5G networking, 1x M.2 E-Key for Wi-Fi connectivity and multiple storage options.
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Comparing VIC-20 and C64 cart sizes
YouTube videos and blogs don't ever prepare me with a sense of scale. Wandering around an Osaka computer store with Clara made us realise just how gargantuan so many modern computer cases are, even ones billed as being smaller.
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Managing the Raspberry PI Undervoltage Detected Warning
Similarly to all electronic computers, the Raspberry PI computer boards need a stable power supply in order to work correctly.
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Register your project for Coolest Projects 2023 now
Young creators, it’s time to share your ideas with the world! Registration for Coolest Projects is now open.
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Instruction fusion and a real serial port for your virtual KIM-1: The Incredible KIMplement 0.3
Everyone should have the retrocomputing experience of a 1976 1MHz MOS 6502 single-board computer with 1K of memory, six hex digit LEDs and a keypad. One of the earliest such systems and one of the least expensive, you program the KIM-1 in 6502 assembly language right on the keypad in hexadecimal and it's amazing what you could do with a system that little. You could even hook up a cassette deck and an external terminal and have a full system for just a few hundred dollars; MOS Technology (and later Commodore) consequently sold a ton of them. We first experienced the KIM-1 in high school and having grown up with Commodore 64s and 128s it was like meeting their long-lost little brother. We spent the whole weekend typing in hex opcodes and learned how to bang on the hardware and make it do surprising things in a space that small. That's the very unit in the picture, still in my possession, and over four and a half decades old it still works.