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Rebuilding the PDP-8 With a Raspberry Pi

braindrainbahrain writes: Hacker Oscarv wanted a PDP-8 mini computer. But buying a real PDP-8 was horribly expensive and out of the question. So Oscarv did the next best thing: he used a Raspberry Pi as the computing engine and interfaced it to a replica PDP-8 front panel, complete with boatloads of fully functional switches and LEDs.

2 of 92 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Why??? by gstoddart · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I've long since stopped asking why, and just gotten on with "why not?"

    Building a replica of a platform gives you the experience of doing it, the understanding of the process, familiarity with the tools you're using ... and possibly some bragging rights among your fellow nerds.

    Why pimp out your CPU case with neon? Why put spinners on your rims? Hell, why have cars anything other than black, which should suffice for anybody? Why play video games? Why watch TV?

    None of these accomplishes anything other than filling in time or soothing your own need for something you think is cool.

    To you, it's opportunity cost. To someone else, it's "why the hell not?" It's something to do they find amusing.

    Compared to half the crap you see on YouTube or anywhere else with humans ... I don't see this as being worse than anything else.

    With all the dumb crap humans do every day, there's at least some coolness to this.

    And I'm betting you can identify at least 10 things you do every week which you couldn't answer "why" if pressed on the issue.

    --
    Lost at C:>. Found at C.
  2. Fond Memories by Gim+Tom · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My first "personal computer" was a PDP-8i at Georgia Tech in the late 1960's. The ISy school had one in a small room in the basement with an ASR TTY (33 I think). There was another room with at least one more TTY with punch and you would code on that machine and after signing up for time on the PDP-8i you would take your paper tape in and after toggling in the boot sequence and loading the BIN tape then the Assembler you would run your tape to punch out your assembled program to run on the machine. I may be leaving out a number of steps since that was a while back.

    in any case that was my first taste of writing any code in a machines assembly language and even then I dreamed of having my very own PDP-8.

    This is a cool project and even for an Old Man I can fully relate to why it was done. I think this experience led to a life long career working with computers ranging from Big Iron mainframes to PC's networks and a variety of internal and Internet facing Servers. Yes, even though retired, I have a couple of Arduinos and Raspberry Pi's around to play with! Learning new things has kept me going all these years.