On Sat, Nov 23, 2024 at 5:27 PM G. Branden Robinson <g.branden.robinson@gmail.com> wrote:
At 2024-11-23T16:07:15-0700, Adam Thornton wrote:
> I was one of those 80s kids who grew up with 6502s with BASIC in ROM.

I was Z80 and M6809.  The rivalries back then were serious business. ;-)

Ah, a Radio Shack aficionado, I presume.

 

But it seems like the price threshold is no longer a problem.  Maybe
what we need is a completely hackable convergence device that you can
plug into any commodity TV, keyboard, and thumb drive and go.  No need
to build a radio into it.  Let that be an optional external peripheral.


That would be a Raspberry Pi.  SD card rather than thumb drive, but...$75 (I mean, I have a $9-many-years-ago thing that ran Linux, so it could be cheaper, certainly, but a fairly fast ARM with several GB of memory is $75) gets you...plug in the sd card, keyboard, mouse, and HDMI (newer Pis require a Micro-HDMI to HDMI adapter, which is like another $5 or $10), and you've got a fully functional Linux machine.  One would think that it wouldn't be too hard to build an OLPC-like environment for it (it probably already exists).

I'm amazed at how ubiquitous Pis are in the control system for the telescope I work on, but maybe I shouldn't be.  After all: it's $75 for a general-purpose Linux box with a bunch of GPIO pins to play with.  That's a lot cheaper than designing a custom hardware anything.

Adam