Jeff,

  You have to remember that the socket was designed for a "Masked ROM",
like the Main ROM, which **was** the standard pinout. At that time there
were no programable ROMs (PROMs or EPROMs) that had compatible pinouts, due
to the circuit changes necessary for the programming function (capacitor
"cells" in EPROMS and "fuses" in PROMS) that caused the pinout to change
because of internal layout.

  Computer manufacturers used Masked ROMs to reduce the per chip cost in
large quantities, where they didn't expect frequent changes in content.
Also I don't remember a 32K EPROM being available in 1983. Most were 8K or
less.

  The initial high cost of producing the "mask" and required minimum
quantity order explains why there were not more "option ROMs" from other
software houses. The One Time Programable (OTP) PROMs would have been a
good choice, but didn't exist in the 32K size, and the OTP EPROMS didn't
exist until decades later.

  I remember this was always a pain in modifying computer "operating
systems"  in the early days of "turn key" computers. Not a problem with the
S-100 Bus systems, as the CPU board was loaded with easy to change EPROM
sockets.

Regards,

Peter

>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 2
> Date: Tue, 18 May 2021 07:36:25 -0500
> From: "Jeffrey Birt" <[email protected]>
> To: <[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: [M100] Other things that used the Molex socket.
> Message-ID: <[email protected]>
> Content-Type: text/plain;       charset="UTF-8"
>
> Interesting. I think if Kyocera/RadioShack had not chosen to go with the
> stupid non-standard pinout it would have been a more popular way of
> distributing custom applications for the machine. The socket itself was a
> good idea to make putting a chip in more idiot proof.
>
> Jeff Birt
>
>

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