Signed by Gates itself? Then you can make a fortune by put it onto an auction :-))) Tamas On 11/15/06, Harold Hallikainen wrote: > > > > I thought this was kinda cool. For the 35th anniversary of the 4004, > > Intel has released schematics of the processor. There is also an > > exhibit at the Intel Museum. > > > > More info here: > > http://www.4004.com/ > > > > Also a cool 4004 controlled tic-tac-toe game: > > http://mywebpages.comcast.net/jsweinrich/ > > > > Enjoy! > > > > Josh > > > Pretty neat! The 4004 and 8008 were the first microprocessors I worked > with in school. We had to write a blink the LED program on an 8008 > development board. They took a LOT of glue logic outside the chips. The > first computer I built used the MC6802. MUCH simpler to interface to RAM, > ROM, and I/O. I bought the Motorola "MIKBUG" ROM to get started. The > system was wire wrapped and talked to my Lear Sielger ADM-1 terminal. I > later bought a Sunrise Electronics ZAP-80 eprom programmer and used the > cross compiler on The Source to do my development (crash and burn > development). Then bought an integer Basic on audio cassette from > Southwest Technical Products. Then licensed 6800 Basic from Microsoft (a > partnership at the time... my license was signed by Bill Gates). Long time > ago! > > Harold > > -- > FCC Rules Updated Daily at http://www.hallikainen.com - Advertising > opportunities available! > -- > http://www.piclist.com PIC/SX FAQ & list archive > View/change your membership options at > http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist > -- unPIC -- The PIC Disassembler http://unpic.sourceforge.net -- http://www.piclist.com PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist