As far as not having an actual ZX Spectrum, if you're a decent solderer you can remedy that with Harlequin kit, also available from ByteDelight.
The original ZX Spectrum required only one specialized chip: the ULA (an
I have a ZX81 upstairs with a soldered RAM pack to avoid the wobblies. :)
I have a ZX81 upstairs with a soldered RAM pack to avoid the wobblies
Oh, man, that RAM pack was definitely party to many a love-hate relationship.
What was the home computer scene like for you in the early 80s?
At uni it was early Apple MACs then in the early 90s I bought my first home PC which was a 386 chip, that was about the time I was using Telix and starting to dial BBS and then run my own :)
I have a ZX81 upstairs with a soldered RAM pack to avoid the wobblies. :)
Ah, yeah, Telix! I still remember the "doodle-dee doodle-dee doodle-dee" sound it would make when a line on the BBS I ws trying to connect to opened up!
Ah, yeah, Telix! I still remember the "doodle-dee doodle-dee doodle-dee" sound it would make when a line on the BBS I ws trying to connect to opened up!
But indeed, SD cards are their weakness, and I've had most of the use-cases die on me when the SD card dies. What you said about the power loss and power issues is probably the cause indeed, I thought it had to
do with overclocking, but the root cause is probably the power indeed.
Does anyone know / can suggest some SSD or other hardware that would be better, and how best to add it to the Pi?
Any external HDD/SDD with a USB interface can be used in a Pi, just like any other computer. However, unless you're connecting to a Pi4 (which
has USB 3), you'll be limited to USB 2 speeds.
Thanks, yeah it's just something I've not delved into but can see how
you could hook in an external HDD drive via USB, I'd need to do some homework on how to get the Pi to boot off it.
I figured there must be some SSD and hardware (a hat or interface) that plugs into the Pi that can accommodate a SSD for quick booting, then
folks would use an external HDD connected via USB to add more storage. I think :)
Does anyone know / can suggest some SSD or other hardware that would be better, and how best to add it to the Pi?
On 08 Jan 2022 at 11:10p, McDoob pondered and said...
Any external HDD/SDD with a USB interface can be used in a Pi, just
like any other computer. However, unless you're connecting to a Pi4
(which has USB 3), you'll be limited to USB 2 speeds.
Thanks, yeah it's just something I've not delved into but can see how you could hook in an external HDD drive via USB, I'd need to do some homework on how to get the Pi to boot off it.
I figured there must be some SSD and hardware (a hat or interface) that plugs into the Pi that can accommodate a SSD for quick booting, then
folks would use an external HDD connected via USB to add more storage. I think :)
That's a problem for C64, from what I've heard...I think the SID chip
hasn't
been reverse-engineered...
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