On 3/3/2017 12:58 PM, John Wilson via cctalk wrote:
I made this as a joke, but also as a simple test device for a NatInst PCI-DIO-96 GPIO card I was writing a driver for:https://www.facebook.com/john.m.b.wilson/videos/10212562451077947/ It occurred to me that lots of old machines had binary front panels (switches and lights) and lots of machines had keypad front panels (octal or hex, with 7-segment LEDs), but I'd never seen a binary keypad front panel. Plus I wanted to experiment with Cherry MX keyswitches, and try out wasdkeyboards's custom keycaps (but they're $7/ea so I didn't want to try anything too big the first time). That plus two 74LS132s, four 74LS240s, and two 74LS273s, discrete stuff and cabling, and a PCI-DIO-96 that was $25 on eBay, and it works. "set dr dio96:" in the DOS and stand-alone versions of E11 V7.3 makes it (or anyone else's homemade doohicky) appear at 777570 as usual (or you can add "set dr r0" to get the R0-during-WAIT display like on a PDP-11/70 -- whatever your OS's NULJOB uses). I'd give Gerbers to anyone who cares but really it's just a dumb joke. Fun one though. John Wilson D Bit
Use a TELEPHONE keypad 0-7 OCTAL 8 and 9 binary. :)
