0077 An open source Apple Liron card and EPROM emulator plus snacks for Rammy!🐏

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  • Опубликовано: 10 июл 2024
  • On today's Super Mini Mail Call, we have an assortment of PC parts, snacks for Rammy and some incredible open source projects. One is an EPROM emulator which allows for very quick development work on these old vintage systems. Another is an open source implementation of the Liron SmartPort disk interface card for the Apple II.
    0:00 PC parts and snacks for Rammy
    43:35 Open Source EPROM emulator
    55:14 Open Source Liron SmartPort disk controller
    -- Video Links
    EPROM Emulator:
    github.com/Kris-Sekula/EPROM-...
    mygeekyhobby.com/2020/07/05/e...
    Hex Editing the Apple II bootrom:
    www.applefritter.com/content/...
    SmartDisk II:
    github.com/btb/SmartDiskII
    Desktest (RAM Test) for the Apple II:
    github.com/misterblack1/apple...
    Bradley's Github page with other projects:
    github.com/btb
    SoftSP card:
    ct6502.org/product/softsp/
    SmartPortSD: (SmartPort hard drive emulator using ATMega)
    github.com/djtersteegc/smartp...
    Adrian's Digital Basement Merch store:
    my-store-c82bd2-2.creator-spr...
    Support the channel on Patreon:
    / adriansdigitalbasement
    Adrian's Digital Basement (Main Channel)
    / @adriansdigitalbasement
    -- Tools
    Deoxit D5:
    amzn.to/2VvOKy1
    store.caig.com/s.nl/it.A/id.16...
    O-Ring Pick Set: (I use these to lift chips off boards)
    amzn.to/3a9x54J
    Elenco Electronics LP-560 Logic Probe:
    amzn.to/2VrT5lW
    Hakko FR301 Desoldering Iron:
    amzn.to/2ye6xC0
    Rigol DS1054Z Four Channel Oscilloscope:
    www.rigolna.com/products/digi...
    Head Worn Magnifying Goggles / Dual Lens Flip-In Head Magnifier:
    amzn.to/3adRbuy
    TL866II Plus Chip Tester and EPROM programmer: (The MiniPro)
    amzn.to/2wG4tlP
    www.aliexpress.com/item/33000...
    TS100 Soldering Iron:
    amzn.to/2K36dJ5
    www.ebay.com/itm/TS100-65W-MI...
    EEVBlog 121GW Multimeter:
    www.eevblog.com/product/121gw/
    DSLogic Basic Logic Analyzer:
    amzn.to/2RDSDQw
    www.ebay.com/itm/USB-Logic-DS...
    Magnetic Screw Holder:
    amzn.to/3b8LOhG
    www.harborfreight.com/4-inch-...
    Universal ZIP sockets: (clones, used on my ZIF-64 test machine)
    www.ebay.com/itm/14-16-18-20-...
    RetroTink 2X Upconverter: (to hook up something like a C64 to HDMI)
    www.retrotink.com/
    Plato (Clone) Side Cutters: (order five)
    www.ebay.com/itm/1-2-5-10PCS-...
    Heat Sinks:
    www.aliexpress.com/item/32537...
    Little squeezy bottles: (available elsewhere too)
    amzn.to/3b8LOOI
    --- Links
    My GitHub repository:
    github.com/misterblack1?tab=r...
    Commodore Computer Club / Vancouver, WA - Portland, OR - PDX Commodore Users Group
    www.commodorecomputerclub.com/
    --- Instructional videos
    My video on damage-free chip removal:
    • How to remove chips wi...
    --- Music
    Intro music and other tracks by:
    Nathan Divino
    @itsnathandivino
  • НаукаНаука

Комментарии • 331

  • @adriansdigitalbasement2
    @adriansdigitalbasement2  5 месяцев назад +51

    Some follow-up notes: As pointed out be several patrons, the connector on that video card is the DMS-59 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DMS-59 and luckily the adapter (splitters) are readily available.
    Also, on the SmartDisk ][ I've been talking to Bradley about the non functional Disk ][ (physical drive) support and it's a known issue with now. He mentioned it's worse than I may have noticed -- reading from the physical disk can actually cause the disk to get corrupted! Luckily when I tested it I had my floppy write protected, which physically keeps it from being written to. So for now, if you make one, it's best to use a separate Disk ][ card for normal floppy drive operations.

    • @mlmmt
      @mlmmt 5 месяцев назад +6

      Was going to say "The link is right there on the page you have open, just had to click it!!!" good to know you can still get them though!

    • @zbradbell
      @zbradbell 5 месяцев назад +5

      I've updated the README now, it looks like the corruption issue is easily avoided. There might be another reason some devices don't work in floppy mode, but I'm sure we can get those resolved.

    • @AmazedStoner
      @AmazedStoner 5 месяцев назад +1

      That NVIDIA card was very common with dell back in the early 2000’s. I don’t know how common as most systems I built used onboard graphics. But nevertheless it was common for the idea that it was accelerated and could support multiple displays. That card was far more common in the small form factor cases as in it was usually the only option to upgrade to. So the more rare thing would be the fact the card was using a full sized slot.

    • @WooShell
      @WooShell 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@mlmmt I was yelling at my screen "Click it, dummy!" all the time after he brought the Wiki page up..

    • @wearwolf2500
      @wearwolf2500 5 месяцев назад

      @@AmazedStoner I remember our old Dell desktops at working having that port, I don't remember what kind of card they used though

  • @TonyAtkinspdx
    @TonyAtkinspdx 6 месяцев назад +30

    I see a wedding ring!!!!!!!

  • @Choralone422
    @Choralone422 5 месяцев назад +27

    The Slot 1 and Slot A designs were used as a stop gap solution as both Intel & AMD realized that the L2 cache needed to be closer to the CPU or in the CPU die itself in order to keep the CPU fed with data to maximize performance. Having the L2 on the mainboard meant that it could not be clocked high enough to keep the CPU fed with data as CPU speeds increased.
    Intel had tried to integrate the L2 into the same package as the CPU with the Pentium Pro, but the yields were very low with the Pentium Pro as the entire processor package had to be discarded if there were any issues with the CPU itself or the L2 cache. Each part had a separate die but could not be tested until they were both placed in the physical CPU package. Once that was done if either part had an issue the entire CPU package had to be discarded.
    Placing the L2 onto the same card as the CPU (but not on the mainboard itself) allowed for the CPU die & L2 to be tested individually which greatly increased yields. Having the L2 cache physically located right next to the CPU die allowed it to be run at a much faster speed than if it was on the mainboard.
    However, once both Intel & AMD had figured out how to integrate the L2 into the processor die itself (Intel - Mendocino & Coppermine cores, AMD Thunderbird & Duron cores) they both went back to having a CPU in a socket again as the slot configuration was no longer needed. AMD had also integrated the L2 into the socket 7 based K6-II+ and K6-III CPUs but the chips that had that were released around the same time as the Athlon/Duron CPUs that had integrated L2 as there was some overlap in the late K6 chips and the earlier Athlon CPUs.
    Intel's Slot 1 used the AGTL+ FSB protocol. AMD's Slot A used the EV6 FSB protocol which was licensed from DEC and also used by the Alpha 21264 processors. Physically the slots are the same but reversed and use different FSB protocols.

    • @alexloktionoff6833
      @alexloktionoff6833 5 месяцев назад +2

      AMD decided to save few cents by using same physical dimensions like Intel. So there was no need to pay for new design of plastic socket and PC case air flow

    • @rabidbigdog
      @rabidbigdog 5 месяцев назад

      Slot A was how AMD introduced the DEC Alpha's memory interface - I forget what it was called. None of the front-side-bus rubbish.

  • @jessewgeek
    @jessewgeek 6 месяцев назад +86

    That card uses a DMS-59 connector.. you scrolled past it several times on that Wikipedia page 😂

    • @Rorschach1024
      @Rorschach1024 5 месяцев назад

      That is a Dell video AGP card.

    • @mar4kl
      @mar4kl 5 месяцев назад +5

      @@Rorschach1024, yup. Dell used DMS-59 on a lot of their OEM video cards in their business desktops, even after they switched to PCIe. Such PCs came with Y cables that provided for dual monitors: dual VGA, dual DVI or one of each. DMS-59 carried two distinct video channels no matter what monitor interfaces were used, so cards like these provided dual monitor functionality before dual integrated video became common on motherboards. I haven't seen DMS-59 on any computers other than Dell, though.

    • @Walczyk
      @Walczyk 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@mar4klyup, i have a huge dell collection. they have some of the dumbest impractical designs

    • @masrock10
      @masrock10 5 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@mar4klI had a slim HP desktop with a quadro card that used this connector, not sure exactly when but it was a core 2 quad machine.

    • @rabidbigdog
      @rabidbigdog 5 месяцев назад +1

      Yup, endless 'workstation' class desktop machines had these for dual-screen. We used to hate it when clients would send in the cable only to find we didn't send it back!!!

  • @MyGeekyHobby
    @MyGeekyHobby 5 месяцев назад +24

    Nice one! Thanks for featuring my emulator in your video Adrian... It sold out on eBay, but will try to re-stock it in the coming week. A few comments, although the emulator uses 128k SRAM, it can only do up to 64k EPROMs - so 2716 to 27512 (initially the design was using 2x 32 SRAMs chips, but those days it is cheaper and faster to solder, to use 1x 128k SRAM chip but only use 64k of it). The SPI EEPROM onboard is to "save" the image so it can be recalled using the red button or recalled automatically when the emulator is powered up (with the -auto option).

    • @zbradbell
      @zbradbell 5 месяцев назад +3

      It's such a great tool, thanks for making it Kris!

    • @suvetar
      @suvetar 5 месяцев назад +1

      It's a great device I think! It's actually given me a little inspiration for a project I've been thinking about, I shall do some more thunking and possibly get in touch! Either way, thank you - it's awesome!

  • @zbradbell
    @zbradbell 5 месяцев назад +25

    serendipitously, I actually used Kris's EPROM Emulator while developing the SmartDisk][!

  • @kugreg
    @kugreg 5 месяцев назад +27

    DMS-59 cables are what you need. They were really common with Dell systems and tons of companies who bought/leased those systems have boxes of those adapters laying about. I bet if you put an ask out you would get an avalanche of those adapter cables.

    • @NotIT
      @NotIT 5 месяцев назад +3

      Right, I can vouch for having boxes of those dual monitor adaptors at work back then. He was so close. Was right there on the Wiki page under "See also".

    • @rantsfromcanada1656
      @rantsfromcanada1656 5 месяцев назад +5

      I suspect Adrian will get an avalanche of them without asking.

  • @tommink2577
    @tommink2577 5 месяцев назад +6

    "Enhance...enhance...enhance" Nice shoutout to Eric O at SMA! 😊

    • @minty_Joe
      @minty_Joe 5 месяцев назад +2

      I thought it was a Super Troopers reference. 😂

    • @bigblumerstrikesback
      @bigblumerstrikesback 2 месяца назад

      It’s has its roots Blade Runner reference

  • @acidhelm
    @acidhelm 6 месяцев назад +53

    The big advantage of AGP is that the AGP slot was connected to the northbridge, whereas PCI slots were connected to the southbridge. That reduced the latency between the CPU and the graphics card.

    • @andyhu9542
      @andyhu9542 6 месяцев назад +11

      This is not universally true. Some earlier chipsets (for example, the i440BX) handles AGP and PCI at the same time. However, all devices on PCI share the same bus (thus bandwidth) while AGP allows one device only and it doesn't share bandwidth with PCI.

    • @Dr_Mario2007
      @Dr_Mario2007 5 месяцев назад +3

      Depending on the chipsets, actually. Later ones moved PCI away from the Northbridge chipset, with slower peripheral moved to the Southbridge chipsets (nowadays, they're effectively combined into one in recent CPUs, with an optional Southbridge chipset connected to PCIe bus), to better prioritize the messages.

    • @jandjrandr
      @jandjrandr 5 месяцев назад +1

      @Dr_Mario2007 Yeah, I remember the history of how they split the north and south bridge and eventually the south bridge was moved into the CPU. There was some commotion over that move because they didn't want to add heat to the CPU and everyone knew that the north bridge got hot at the time. I think in the end it was all "hot" air though because the miniaturisation on the CPU die was such a smaller process node it was more efficient and cooler in the end.

    • @lexluthermiester
      @lexluthermiester 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@jandjrandr
      You mean the northbridge was moved to the CPU. The southbridge has never been on the CPU die.

    • @smunaut
      @smunaut 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@lexluthermiester Well on some modern CPU, the high speed lanes can work as TB / USB3 / SATA / PCIe and they also have video output, so one could argue part of the south bridge (which typically handles IO like drives and USB among other) got moved to the CPU too ...

  • @OscarSommerbo
    @OscarSommerbo 5 месяцев назад +12

    The Slot-1 form factor was actually quite reasonable. It saved space on die by having the bulky L2 cache on a dedicated board that wasn't user modifiable, and at the time lithography was still huge. It improved yield by separating cache and CPU, it improved profitability by binning CPU and L2 separately and then matching them. And of course Intel wanted their new cool CPU to look cool. It simplified potential upgrades. The Pentium chips need more cooling and by angling the CPU out at 90 degrees (with hefty brackets) cooling was made easier. And the edge connector was a great answer to all those bent pins on 486's, if anyone ever bother to upgrade their Slot-1 systems.
    There are a bunch of good and not so good reasons.

    • @Peter_S_
      @Peter_S_ 5 месяцев назад +3

      I came to say much the same thing. I agree completely. It was also a very good thing from the standpoints of signal integrity and ease of motherboard layout.

  • @lexluthermiester
    @lexluthermiester 5 месяцев назад +16

    @AdriansDigitalBasement][
    17:25 I did! The slot design had a number of advantages over Pin Grid designs, the primary being: No bent pins, ever! Another benefit was better cooling possibilities. There were a number of other benefits that became less relevant a few years later and completely irrelevant a few years later. At it's time, the slot designs(Slot1, Slot2 for the original Xeons & SlotA) were great ideas! EDIT: I mean think about it, we had and still have expansion card interfaces, RAM, ISA, PCI, AGP, PCIe and so on. Why not do the same with a CPU? It made logical sense, at that time.

    • @snuf23
      @snuf23 5 месяцев назад

      The big thing was that slot 1 and slot A allowed you to run the cache at a higher bus speed than the motherboard bus. Initially the L2 cache speed was 50% of the CPU speed and later 100%. Motherboard bus speed during the initial Pentium 3 era was 100 or 133 Mhz versus the CPU speed of 450 Mhz or higher.
      The later socket 370 Pentium IIIs had L2 cache embedded in the chip die, running at the full core speed. Slot 1 was pretty much a stop gap to squeeze out extra performance and that cache made a huge difference.

  • @MrVipeg
    @MrVipeg 5 месяцев назад +3

    About the 486 MB. First, visual inspection for damaged traces. Second, that PLL chip should be outputting "doubled" frequency, i.e. 66Mhz (at oscilloscope) for your DX33, not 33Mhz / 25MHz. Third, you should definitely check for correct supply voltages in the cpu socket (without the cpu in it).

  • @megan_alnico
    @megan_alnico 5 месяцев назад +8

    One thing you have to understand is that AMD at the time was so small compared to Intel. I mean they're small today compared to Intel but back then they were even smaller. Up until this point they had been socket compatible with Intel. The slot generation really signaled the end to single socket, multiple vendor chips. All AMD could do was to tell the motherboard manufacturers "look man you got all the same parts, you just got to arrange them slightly different and you can use our chips." Luckily the athlons were so good that people wanted them because otherwise AMD would have failed to get any motherboard manufacturer to support them or in the future any of their custom sockets.
    It wasn't until they were socket adapters that you saw Cyrix or other competitors chips in these machines.

    • @fordesponja
      @fordesponja 5 месяцев назад +1

      AMD made cheaper Intel clones until K5, that's when they started to do their own thing and improved over Intel. The run K6 - Athlon 64 was legendary for AMD.

  • @michaelkramer5199
    @michaelkramer5199 5 месяцев назад +4

    RAMMY!! We've missed you!
    So glad to see Rammy again. 🐏
    Always a pleasure to see a SMMC video. Thanks Adrian!

  • @bruwin
    @bruwin 5 месяцев назад +9

    Not sure if anyone else has mentioned it yet, so I'll go ahead. Slot A is flipped 180 degrees from Slot 1. So you were right, they're not electrically compatible, and it *can* be confusing, but since the key on the slot only allows the heatsink to go on in one direction, generally speaking it gives you a good idea if it's a Slot 1 or Slot A motherboard.

    • @mckinnon42
      @mckinnon42 5 месяцев назад +3

      Just to yes and this, the reason Intel and AMD went with Slot 1/A was that integrating L2 cache on die (or on package) wasn't economical yet, so both companies put it on a daughter board with high speed interconnects to the CPU. Once foundry technology sufficiently improved, on die L2 cache become economical and the P3 Coppermine / Athlon Thunderbird were the result.

  • @Starchface
    @Starchface 5 месяцев назад +12

    I have recently been thinking about what makes a computer "retro" for me and I have realized it is not purely chronological. My dream computer has a one-piece integrated design, brings the user to a text console immediately upon power-on, and is incompatible with every other model of computer software. That is the world of my childhood. Paradise.

    • @bobweiram6321
      @bobweiram6321 5 месяцев назад +1

      A command-line is your paradise? What a sad childhood.😢😢😮😢😢😮

  • @mattsword41
    @mattsword41 5 месяцев назад +8

    what is nice now for slot 1 is that if you have a board like the 440bx, you can really easily swap between pentium 2s and pentium 3s all the way from 233MHz p2 to 1Ghz p3 (and 1.4GHz p3s with right board, a bit of hackery and a slotket adapter)

  • @LeftoverBeefcake
    @LeftoverBeefcake 5 месяцев назад +2

    13:00 Yup, on the Amiga, normally when you move a window it just shows an outline. However, there were public domain & shareware utilities like MCP, MultiCX, PowerWindows, and Opaque that allowed you to see a window's contents as the windows were being moved on the Workbench screen, with varying degrees of slowness depending on your hardware specs. This was one thing I loved about the Amiga PD/Shareware scene, since you could usually find a utility to do many different things that weren't built into the OS, but were features of the other popular OS's at the time.

  • @djmips
    @djmips 5 месяцев назад +3

    Even though the PCs of the nineties were fairly similar, one can really get into the variety of graphics cards of this era. Especially the dawn of 3D. Very retro.

  • @Charlesb88
    @Charlesb88 5 месяцев назад +7

    That Nvidea AGP card uses a DMS-59 (Dual Monitor Solution w/ 59 pins) port for connecting digital and analog displays to. The DMS-59 port provides two DVI or VGA outputs in a single connector. You'll need adaptor dongles to use it with a standard DVI, DVI to HDMI, or VGA cable. There are Y-style breakout cable adaptors for DMS-59 ports that allow dual monitors to be connected to such cards. Note: If you look at 15:12 in the video, you will notice a link to Wikipedia's article on the DMS-59 connector.

    • @davidludwig7506
      @davidludwig7506 5 месяцев назад

      @Adrian, I can probably find a y connector of this type for you. We commonly had these at work on older dell desktops

  • @Peter_S_
    @Peter_S_ 5 месяцев назад +3

    I just got home from work and got a zillion RUclips notifications.
    As a looked down the list I realized Adrian's channels are part of a very small subgroup where I don't even read what it says, I just click. 👍

  • @jeromethiel4323
    @jeromethiel4323 5 месяцев назад +2

    I guess retro to me means childhood. I cut my teeth on a TRS-80 model 1. Moved on to Apple ]['s, and then on to Amiga's, and finally PC's.
    So the original Altair/Imsai, Apple, Vic-20, KIM, etc. Those are retro to me, because they were state of the art when i was getting started. People younger than i might find a 486 "retro" or maybe even a P-III. It all depends.
    I mean stuff i was listening to in my teens is now considered "classic rock." It was just rock when i was a kid, "classic rock" was 60's and 70's music. Oh, the times they are a changin'! ^-^

  • @morantaylor
    @morantaylor 5 месяцев назад +2

    The early Athlon's were also on a card for the same reason as Pentium 2 the cache was external to die.
    It was possible to resolder the dividers resistors to change the divider to make overclocking easier. I resoldered my A600 cache divider from 1/2 to 1/3 so CPU could be overclocked to 850Mhz.
    I still have the CPU in my Win98 games PC still has the divider at 1/3 running stock 600Mhz clock speed.
    The advantage was the cache could have its own interface to the CPU independant of the front side bus clock.
    The reason they used the same slot an packaging so motherboard and cooling manufactures could use the same mechanical connection to save retooling.

  • @msuc5vette
    @msuc5vette 5 месяцев назад

    I gotta say Adrian you do an incredible job on these videos. Easy to follow, lots of excitement, and great content. Love it 👍

  • @jeromethiel4323
    @jeromethiel4323 5 месяцев назад +2

    Rammy's back!
    And you're gonna be in trouble!
    Hey nah! Hey nah!
    My Rammy's back!
    Rammy was missed. ^-^

  • @K6LCM
    @K6LCM 27 дней назад

    I like your assessment of retro. It’s totally fair to say that it’s in the eye of the beholder and then share your personal taste. I happen to agree with it.

  • @RobTheSquire
    @RobTheSquire 5 месяцев назад

    You make a good point about what counts as retro depending on who is looking back and what the hardware can do.

  • @soniclab-cnc
    @soniclab-cnc 5 месяцев назад +1

    I loved my old Slot-A, AMD k 600. I ran that system for many years as my email server.

  • @JLmandolin
    @JLmandolin 5 месяцев назад +1

    I like that t-shirt 😄 in your video ("Sometimes good caps just go bad") lol.

  • @webfreezy
    @webfreezy 5 месяцев назад +4

    "Super mini mail call" is really a running gag now 😂 An epic mail call would probably be an 18 hour video then 😁

  • @mattsword41
    @mattsword41 5 месяцев назад +3

    Congrats Adrian!

  • @der.Schtefan
    @der.Schtefan 5 месяцев назад

    Anything is retro that is able to make you tell a passionate story about something benign, that makes your eyes sparkle, that makes you pause and dream about something, that was unobtainable for you at the time, or is from a time long gone by before you started.

  • @markm7991
    @markm7991 5 месяцев назад +2

    First I've seen a wedding band? Congratulations! Also, there were never any dual slot-a machines.

  • @KomradeMikhail
    @KomradeMikhail 5 месяцев назад +4

    Speaking of getting mixed up by L1, L2, and L3 cache... You might try out one of the rare systems with an L4 cache.
    The easy one would be a Broadwell based Core-i7 5775C, or i5 5675C.
    They give quite a bump up for anybody still running an old Haswell Socket 1150 board... At least in apps that can take advantage of the extra cache.
    It's also possible to run an intel Optane accelerator as cache on these... Technically designating it as an L5.

  • @theahutchings8407
    @theahutchings8407 6 месяцев назад +19

    I was building pcs in the slot era! If I recall Intel’s on die cache yields were awful so they came up with Slot 1 to carry the cache. Leaving it up to the board manufacturers would end up with no cache in budget machines and the P2 needed the cache to have decent performance.
    AMD were just playing follow intel. The slots the same connector but rotated 180° on the board because they’re not electrically compatible, don’t want people frying their CPU because you copied intel!

    • @adriansdigitalbasement2
      @adriansdigitalbasement2  5 месяцев назад +5

      Ah so that was why Slot 1 was created. So it's a giant bodge by Intel.... *SIGH*

    • @silmarian
      @silmarian 5 месяцев назад

      You beat me to it, Patreon member!

    • @whelmy
      @whelmy 5 месяцев назад +3

      Amd did not have a choice much like Intel, cache memory at the time wasn't able to reach the speeds cpus were operating at. so the best solution they had until tech caught up was the processor on a card. They could have gone with L2 on the motherboard again but that would have been even slower due to the distance from the cpu. memories a bit hazy but I believe amd had the performance lead during this era over the pentium 3.

    • @monad_tcp
      @monad_tcp 5 месяцев назад

      @@whelmy if I remember that was the era pentium3 went super-scalar and had a long pipeline, AMD scaled up vertically by having less latency, which wasn't good because they also had less L1-cache on die, so they ended up also going to the insane slot thing

    • @T3hBeowulf
      @T3hBeowulf 5 месяцев назад +2

      Rumor has it that AMD used the same connector as Intel for the K7 (rotated 180 degrees) to save mainboard manufactures from issues with different manufacturing processes.
      Intel did not license Slot 1 so AMD created Slot A... but yeah, it was a stop-gap/bodge. 😅

  • @danaeckel5523
    @danaeckel5523 5 месяцев назад +1

    About the card with the non-standard DVI port, babk around 2008-2011 or so the Dell and HP workstations we purchased came with video cards with those adapters. They would split out into 2 standard DVI ports and you could drive 2 monitors, and included the analog signals.

  • @mattsword41
    @mattsword41 5 месяцев назад

    totally agree with you on the retro :)
    just depends what floats your boat in the end!

  • @Vermilicious
    @Vermilicious 5 месяцев назад +4

    That ROM emulator was really neat.

  • @tonybossaller4074
    @tonybossaller4074 5 месяцев назад +3

    On the Promise card, the Non-RAID and RAID cards were almost identical. Just two wiring changes and then reflashing the BIOS. I have a few hacked cards around. Worked on both ATA66 and ATA133 versions of the card. I think I also have the original RAID card too.

  • @alexloktionoff6833
    @alexloktionoff6833 5 месяцев назад

    Waw, implementing IWD in descrete is cool! And the design of jumpers and configuration is so cool

  • @erinwiebe7026
    @erinwiebe7026 5 месяцев назад +3

    It's interesting to watch your journey with the M601 board. I have the same board (perhaps a different version number), and I went through the same process of discovery with the different websites to determine the clock settings for the PLL52C05. It's a shame you weren't able to discover why it's not posting.

  • @Biomancer81
    @Biomancer81 5 месяцев назад +4

    The slot 1 CPU design was a necessary evil for reasons of cache. They went back to a single chip design after they made a jump forward with later pentium chips.

  • @edwardjoyner9344
    @edwardjoyner9344 5 месяцев назад

    Love the slackware story. I was doing the same thing back in the day. Remember installing from a bazillion diskettes? 😊. Those were the days

  • @RambozoClown
    @RambozoClown 5 месяцев назад +4

    There were some slot 1 gems. Like the Celeron 300A with on die cache that would almost always overclock to 450MHz. They sold for $180 and were just as fast as the $500 Pentium II 450

  • @pederb82
    @pederb82 5 месяцев назад +1

    That cable look like what we used on digital signage - it has two screen included in one connector. :)

  • @jonweimer
    @jonweimer 6 месяцев назад +6

    Some of these boards really need a battery. I would try that. I know my asus p5 board will not post without the battery in. Just a thought.

  • @terrylutfi8888
    @terrylutfi8888 5 месяцев назад +4

    Adrian, I had a dead 486 motherboard with similar issue. I checked the CLK pin on CPU socket and there was no clock. The clock was coming from a 74 series buffer which was connected to chipset. I took the buffer chip out and tested it on TL866 and it was fine. Next step I checked the chipset, it was receiving the clock from crystal but not outputting to the buffer chip. Replacing the chipset fixed my issue. I think checking CPU Socket pins will give you a better idea what the culprit could be.

  • @stamasd8500
    @stamasd8500 5 месяцев назад +1

    The reason for the slot1 (and AMD's slotA) was the cache. By placing that on a daughtercard with the CPU it allowed faster access to the cache bypassing the system bus. Of course that became obsolete once they figured out how to place the L2 cache onto the CPU die, but they continued to make Slot1/SlotA CPUs in that form factor for a while for backwards compatibility reasons. And that's also the reason why Apple used CPU daughtercards in the PPC era, many of those also had external cache on the daughterboard.

  • @hardlyworgen71
    @hardlyworgen71 5 месяцев назад +2

    As I recall, the Pentium Pro had yield issues with the L2 cache. The "Slot 1" Pentium 2 & Katmai Pentium 3 was Intel's solution to have 512K L2 on a separate manufacturing process running at half CPU speed versus the much slower motherboard bus speed cache used by older CPUs. Later Coppermine (and Toiletin) Pentium 3 had 256K on-die L2 running at full CPU speed. After Intel solved the problem of acceptable yields of on-die L2, they went to Socket 370.
    Your Celeron 300A had 128K on-die L2. The original non-A Celeron 300 had no L2 cache at all. There were of course other speeds for both core types of Celeron.
    As for AMD's reason to follow with a slot formfactor, I suspect cache yields was their reason as well, because Slot A eventually got replaced with Socket A. Also, there was a way to tap the Slot A PCB with a device called a "Golden Finger" for overclocking.

    • @mikem.9197
      @mikem.9197 5 месяцев назад +1

      Then with Socket A we could just bridge L1 with a graphite pencil and enable multiplier based OCing.

  • @yakmage8085
    @yakmage8085 5 месяцев назад +16

    Is that a wedding ring?

    • @suvetar
      @suvetar 5 месяцев назад +2

      Enquiring minds wish to know! It's a nice colour too 🙂

  • @evensgrey
    @evensgrey 5 месяцев назад

    Slot 1 was developed to solve a production problem. To putthe cache in the same package as the CPU required them to be bonded together before they could be tested, so any flaws in either resulted in having to discard the whole assembly, which made yields low and production costs high. Slot 1 allowed the CPU and external cache to be placed on q small daughterboard, allowing them to be tested before installation, making yields higher and production costs lower.
    And yes, Slot A and Slot 1 used the same connector with a different pinout, but they also were oriented differently on the motherboard, being backwards to each other.

  • @EggziztenselyThroughoutLife
    @EggziztenselyThroughoutLife 4 месяца назад

    I am a few months away from becoming 24, and I generally respect and share your opinion on what we choose to call retro-computers. I honestly hold no nostalgic thoughts for the fairly standartized beige boxes of the 90s, nor for the bland black boxes of 2005 to 2013-ish. But those late 70s and 80s machines, that are experimental and sometimes one-off computers with mediocre capabilities (compared to today, ofcourse), which came with adorable form factor cases are totally different, and thus, of interest to me.
    And I find it especially interesting that you can diagnose and talk about circuitry in detail,- which I, as someone who doesnt get how these things work exactly, find it very useful to know about. (Though I havent found any real-life appliance of this wisdom yet.)

  • @g0bzy
    @g0bzy 5 месяцев назад +1

    The phrase 'gan canny marra' Lawrence used in his letter is local dialect used in the North East in the UK. Like Newcastle / Sunderland or South Shields area. Funny to hear that spoken on your channel here!. I'm a Sunderland lad, and it basically means 'go well sir' a kind of 'take care'.. where 'marra' is a man.

  • @Colin_Ames
    @Colin_Ames 5 месяцев назад

    Some nice goodies in this mail call.

  • @bjwoodruff
    @bjwoodruff 5 месяцев назад +3

    Keep warm in Portland

  • @Dirk-Ulowetz
    @Dirk-Ulowetz 5 месяцев назад

    I'm not a subscriber for a long time. So, this is the first time, I see Rammy.
    HELLO RAMMY! NICE TO MEET YOU!
    Pentium 3... at this time, I had a AMD K62.

  • @pappp1428
    @pappp1428 5 месяцев назад

    Slot1 and SlotA both used the same SC242 edge as their physical interface. They were not electrically compatible.
    They were at least designed to have clearance (for the heatsink, etc.) on opposite sides relative to the key, so MOST motherboards had a physical obstruction to keep you from sticking incompatible parts together.
    Slot processors were mostly about making room for on-package but off-die caches to improve yields (smaller processor die + SRAMs instead of one large die with both).
    In recent years we're seeing an explosion various fancier multi-chip modules, chiplets, stacked dies, etc. which are kind of the same idea.
    Ed: I see that you recalled later in the video.

  • @genjii931
    @genjii931 5 месяцев назад

    Hard Hat Mack was one of my favorites on my Apple //e (my first computer). I also loved Gemstone Warrior, and Conan the Barbarian. Plus Loderunner and Choplifter, of course. Oh and Ultima II (never played any past II).

  • @jamesross3939
    @jamesross3939 5 месяцев назад

    During the 90's I built about 2 PCs per year starting with a 386sx 16mhz. Then I slowed down in 2000s. I still like playing around with early to mid 2000s tech. I call them the XP class PCs. If it has a floppy controller and IDE controller then I consider them retro.

  • @crashputer
    @crashputer 5 месяцев назад +1

    That is a DMS59 connector. It's commonly available once you know the right search terms, ha. You are correct in the fact that it is used to send dual DVI connections out from a single port.

  • @hiredgun7186
    @hiredgun7186 5 месяцев назад

    I ran a 733 MHZ slot A AMD for quite a few years, replaced my old P1 233mmx with it, loved it , was fast at the time and gave me 0 problems over the 5 years I had it, back then I didnt have the money at the time for an uber high end system, but for dollars to performance , the AMD was king. gamed on it , did some 3d creation with it, visual chat , etc , one of my favourite old machines I had , right up there with the old 486 I ran before my pentium

  • @KennethScharf
    @KennethScharf 5 месяцев назад

    Intel used the slot design in the days before they were able to package memory and cpu chips on a single substrate. They also were able to include a heat sink onto the package.
    The 8251 was used in embedded processors. This was Intel's serial chip that would do both synchronous and asynchronous protocols. It had a few bugs that had to be programed around, but it did work. It was limited in it's max communication speed. Motorola had the 6850, MOS had the 6550. However the NSC 8250 family became the standard for the PC. AMD introduced a similar part for their second source of the Zilog Z8000 family.

  • @angrydove4067
    @angrydove4067 5 месяцев назад +2

    Someone is sporting a ring, are congratulations in order? I feel "retro" ends with the Pentuim 1.

  • @terryraymond7984
    @terryraymond7984 5 месяцев назад

    Rammy is really paying attention to youre presentation

  • @seancurtin6103
    @seancurtin6103 5 месяцев назад

    My newest "retro" computer is a K6-2+ 400 running Win98. I agree. Anything running XP or newer is effectively a modern PC.

  • @gsestream
    @gsestream 5 месяцев назад +1

    about the jumpers, usually you just try all combinations to break the lock

  • @tigheklory
    @tigheklory 5 месяцев назад

    I love that EPROM emulator! It would be cool if there were a version that supported multiple EPROMS in a board like in the case of arcade boards with an array of 27C64s

  • @Shamino0
    @Shamino0 5 месяцев назад

    Slot-1/Slot-A processors were not a mistake, and nobody thought the slot was better than a more standard PGA/LGA chip. But they didn't have much of a choice at the time.
    At that time, we didn't have these really tiny nm-scale die processes. It was no longer practical to put cache memory on the motherboard, but cache chips were too big to put on the CPU's die. So they made a small circuit board that could use separate (off-die) cache chips tightly coupled with the CPU core. That board connected to the motherboard with the slot.
    It may be worth noting the huge size of contemporary socket-based CPUs like the Pentium Pro and the Pentium II Overdrive designed to fit into a PPro socket. Those were huge ceramic packages and with the process technology of the time, advances were going to make the package too large for use in PCs. Hence the slots.
    But when process technologies improved so you could put the cache on the die and put the results into a normal size package (Pentium 4, Athlon 64, etc.), the companies immediately abandoned slots, because they were no longer necessary.

  • @HippoXXL
    @HippoXXL 5 месяцев назад

    You know, you are a nerd, when you describe things you like with the words "it's a pain to use".
    Greetings from Germany,
    Marcus

  • @ultrametric9317
    @ultrametric9317 5 месяцев назад +1

    Retro SOFTWARE on things like a tricked-out Slot 1 machine would be great. Like, make a period-correct Windows NT 4 computer and run Exchange on it :) See to what extent you could get IIS to talk to the modern internet!

  • @benedictnothing
    @benedictnothing 5 месяцев назад

    “Gan canny marra!” Ha ha! Now I know that fella must be from my neck of the woods.

  • @Darxide23
    @Darxide23 5 месяцев назад +1

    That graphics interface is a DMS-59 which as you guessed, provides two signals from one port with a Y-cable. You can output either two DVI signals or two VGA signals, or one of each with the appropriate Y-adapter cable. This standard is NOT proprietary and was only deprecated in 2020. The cables should be readily available with very little premium pricing, if any.

  • @stevef6392
    @stevef6392 5 месяцев назад +1

    That Athlon may have looked a lot like a P2/P3, but it used a vastly different bus. IIRC they basically used a DEC Alpha style bus & double-pumped it to boot. And it was an absolute floating point monster in its day.
    I don't think AMD _wanted_ to create a slotted CPU like Intel. It's just that, like Intel, AMD needed their CPU performance to scale with clock speed as they raced to a GHz, which required something significantly faster than motherboard cache. All at a time when it was still a little too pricey to put a meaningful amount of the stuff on-die. Even PowerPC chips in Macs were on daughter cards along with the L2 at around that time.

  • @eddiehimself
    @eddiehimself 5 месяцев назад

    Intel were basically forced into putting the Pentium II on a card. With the Pentium Pro, the L2 cache and the CPU dies were connected on chip using glue logic and they had no way of testing the two dies separately before committing them to the chip, and it ended up with disastrously low yields, hence why the Pentium Pro was so expensive. So with the PII, they put the cache in separate chips that went onto the card in Slot 1 so they didn't have to just throw out good CPU dies with bad cache or vice versa. Anyway, by the time the second iteration of Pentium III came out, they'd shrunk the process down enough that they could fit the L2 cache in the same die as the CPU. Nostalgia Nerd did a video on it if you are interested in hearing more.

  • @Psychlist1972
    @Psychlist1972 5 месяцев назад +1

    I think the slot 1 approach stopped everyone from wrecking the pins on their CPU. It's been a while, but I suspect those were before the pinless Intel processors. Before that, even with zero insertion force sockets, many people would always damage their CPU pins. I never had problems with the pins, but I was careful :P

  • @CPUGalaxy
    @CPUGalaxy 5 месяцев назад +1

    For the defective motherboard i experienced several times already that pins of the chipset can get lose somehow over the time or if the board was bend once too strong. Checking with high magnification if you have a lose pin. I was able to fix most of my declared dead boards after I got this hint.

  • @bryanreed107
    @bryanreed107 5 месяцев назад +2

    I loved my super cheap Celeron 300A slot 1 that could easily be overclocked to 450mhz.

  • @earthlydescent
    @earthlydescent 5 месяцев назад

    That Nvidia connector is a dual monitor cable and was used often in Dell Optiplex (P4) machines from the mid-00s. I think I might still have one rolling around.

  • @chrisjpf33
    @chrisjpf33 5 месяцев назад +1

    Kris owes you commission for the EPROM emulator I just bought on eBay! ;-)

  • @2009numan
    @2009numan 5 месяцев назад +1

    that video out port on that AGP card is called a DMS-59 connector Adrian

  • @button-puncher
    @button-puncher 5 месяцев назад

    Slot 1 brought in an era of the first consumer dual-cpu boards. Before that you had to buy expensive server boards.
    I had a Tyan Tiger 100 with Dual PII 400's and dual 15" CRTs. OH BABY.
    Slot 1 also had the infamous Celeron C300A. You couldn't run them in a dual config though.

  • @tme2912
    @tme2912 5 месяцев назад

    I remember having these graphics connector on Sun workstations.with dual screen. it is DMS-59 connector for dual screen VGA and DVI

  • @phatputer
    @phatputer 5 месяцев назад

    While the P3 holds a special place in my heart, I can agree with your view on where it sits for retro, for me retro ends at the end of the 90s, so tail end of the p3 market, before NT based operating systems were standard, and 3DFX graphics cards were king.

  • @digitalarchaeologist5102
    @digitalarchaeologist5102 5 месяцев назад

    Possibly already said, but 9:09 DMS59 connector. Usually required a breakout connector for two DVI connectors, two VGA connectors or a combo. Usually used on low profile cards

  • @ratdude747
    @ratdude747 5 месяцев назад +1

    Slot 1/2 (and for that matter, Slot A) were a "good" idea because of Pentium II and early (Katmai) Pentium III having off-die L2 Cache, as they couldn't get good yields out of on-die L2 Cache (Pentium Pro, for example). But Mendocino Celeron and Dixon Pentium II proved it could be made to work (smaller fast cache is better than larger slow cache), hence why Pentium III coppermine (and Athlon Thunderbird) were on-die cached and primarily made in PGA sockets again (Socket 370 and Socket A/462, respectively).
    Oh, and slot A is mechanically a slot 1 connector turned 180 degrees. Something AMD did to reduce motherboard costs (and to encourage motherboard OEMs to support them)... unlike super socket 7, there isn't backwards compatibility (why it's flipped 180), but at least it used the same connector which allowed ordering in bulk.

  • @billraty14
    @billraty14 5 месяцев назад

    The slot processor was introduced by Intel primarily to protect IP and keep competitors from taking a public specifications for electrical connectivity of pins, and making a plug in replacement. AMD seriously made bank with the Am386 through the socket 7 series, and so did Cyrix, with drop in upgrades. When Intel introduced Slot 1 their customers and 3rd party board manufacturers had to sign an NDA and license not to reveal electrical connectivity to anyone. The reason why AMD had a slot processor was to sell to customers that had purchased slot "pick and place" machines. Since consumers were still in the middle of the megaherz wars, CPU heat generate rapidly outstripped what the "slot" could dissapate, and so PC companies went back to regular horizontal sockets/PGAs, but never again have the particulars of connections been public or available in a non-licensed book or spec.

  • @infi84
    @infi84 5 месяцев назад

    I love slot processors just for their oddity factor, I only ever had a PII system back in the day for slot processors but I still like them today and am trying to use a Slot A system occasionally... trying because it's not very stable at the moment ^^

  • @jpnc2319
    @jpnc2319 5 месяцев назад

    That 486 motherboard looks very similar to my second motherboard that I had long time ago.
    It used to have the same problem.
    Sometimes, bending a little bit the board can fix it for a while.
    Probably is not a bad chip. It's more probably a broken circuit trace near BIOS, near processor or near power.

  • @Breeffeehey
    @Breeffeehey 5 месяцев назад

    I would have to check, back at home... I think I've got a card like the "weird DVI" one, with two adapter cables, one 2xVGA and one 2xDVI... you might have more use for it than myself, hehe

  • @anthonyblacker8471
    @anthonyblacker8471 5 месяцев назад

    There was a LOT of PC junk in the 90s. Still, that PIII I remember when my buddy got one, a 500mhz but man I was on a 486dx4100 which was really not that great either... but that was really the time of the big change.. win98 came out around that time.. then it was like a jet pack got put on technology and it went crazy. AMD a few years later came out with their 64 Athlon and things never went backwards from there.. That pIII is probably right at the change from vintage to 'junk' to modern times.. it was necessary though.. we needed that technology and those things were NOT cheap either!

  • @bargu
    @bargu 5 месяцев назад

    Good old PCShits boards, always disappoint. The bane of every PC repair guy in the late 90's early 2000's.

  • @vitorluis_freerider
    @vitorluis_freerider 5 месяцев назад +3

    AMD Slot A is in fact the same but inverted, rendering it impossible to accidentally insert a wrong CPU

  • @mikesilva3868
    @mikesilva3868 5 месяцев назад

    Great 😊

  • @alanstrickland9717
    @alanstrickland9717 5 месяцев назад

    The AMD Slot A was also flipped compared to the intel. The heatsink would usually face the opposite direction if you tried to put it in a slot 1 motherboard and not fit as it would interfere with the IO ports.

  • @solzarcat555
    @solzarcat555 5 месяцев назад

    rammy back nice

  • @N9TAX
    @N9TAX 5 месяцев назад

    So at the time the slot processors came out the idea if I remember correctly was that the processor manufacturer (not the main board manufacturer) had control over the distance the cache was from the processor. That way they could run it faster. When the P3 and newer AMD chips started putting the cache on die there was no need for the slot cards any more. The reality was I think it introduced more speed issues then it solved so....

  • @not_crazy
    @not_crazy 5 месяцев назад

    The EPROM sized SRAMs are also used in the Timex Sinclair. I am actually planning to do a RAM upgrade on a couple Timex Sinclair 1000 systems that I purchased at an estate sale last summer. I also need to fix the keyboard flex cable. I've only opened one, but assume they are both damaged.

  • @SimonEllwood
    @SimonEllwood 5 месяцев назад

    I used the EPROM emulator as part of the Dataman Softy S3 back in the day. I think in the 1990s.

  • @simonweel7971
    @simonweel7971 5 месяцев назад +1

    What I recall about the 'slot war' was Intel making it difficult for AMD to make pin-compatible processors since the 'slot processor' was patented by Intel. But it kind of back fired - AMD's market share was big enough at that time for motherboard manufacturers to make motherboards for both Intel and AMD processors. So it didn't hurt AMD at all. And the slot-processors where quite expensive to make. So with the Pentium III, Intel went back to 'ye ole PGA processor - much cheaper to make.

  • @El_K_Bron_Del_Moycas
    @El_K_Bron_Del_Moycas 5 месяцев назад

    Hello Adrian. I remember a few motherboards not booting at all without a keyboard connected. It's a shot in the dark, but it might work.