On Tuesday, March 4, 2014 3:22:08 PM UTC-6, Andrew Bingham wrote:
>
> If the logic would fit in a 16V8, the Atmel ones start at $1.32 at Digikey.
>

An outside of the box idea is a PIC 16F505 has an internal osc, 14 pin DIP 
with 12 usable I/O lines and you only need 11 of them. And its about half 
the cost around 75 cents in bulk.  So program it, slap the power leads on, 
and it does its thing.

True, a GAL can process I/O ten million times faster than the eye can 
perceive, whereas the PIC running a tight loop and simple table lookup 
might only be able to process a hundred thousand times faster than the eye 
can perceive.  Fast enough for human I/O devices, although not for memory 
decoding.

Something I dislike about Microchip is they never hook up GND to pin 7.  If 
they did, you could program up a couple of their processors to emulate many 
TTL logic chip at up to "hundreds of KHz" speeds just by loading a simple 
program into the PIC.  I need a 7400.  No wait I need a 7402, I'll just 
reprogram it.  That doesn't work because Microchip always wires GND to pin 
1 or something inconvenient like that.  Doesn't matter for a new design, 
only if you're trying to make a "7447 replacement" (other than that being a 
16 pin, obviously)

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