Homebrew Computing and the RCA 1802
There are many documented examples of early micros that were typically built as one-offs by very skilled people. Machines made by no one company and built off no standard design. This machine is my only true example of that era and has no searchable history beyond ending up at a second hand store. Lets take a look around. For more information, photos and both ROM images and a disassembly of said ROM, check out the discussion at https://forum.vcfed.org/index.php?thr... Remember to follow me on Twitter at @CelGenStudios to keep up to date on what I am doing and what might be happening in the next video.

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Development Tools for the RCA 1802: The RCA MSE-3001

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Sun Blade 100 - Unix Gets Cheap

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Texas Instruments Made a Computer (& It Failed)

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Commodore History Part 2 - The VIC 20

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Weirdest Processors Ever Made Explained in 11 Minutes

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Building the COMIX-35 Computer

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1970's Homebrew Computer Experience

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This Apple IIgs repair got really weird

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New 8080A Computer

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WORM Media and the Sony WDD-931 - Optical Storage Goes Big

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Apollo Core Rope Memory (Apollo Guidance Computer Part 30)

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An ELF *off* the shelf | The Quest Super ELF | COSMAC 1802

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DEC and the PiDP-11

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Amiga 3000 Part 1: This repair went off the rails

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Writing Self Modifying Code for a 1980s Japanese Computer: Gakken FX Micro-Computer (FX-Micom R-165)

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How the TI-99/4A Home Computer Worked

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MSX Computers - Scrolling, Sprites, and Stereotypes

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A 6800 Single Board Computer

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Unlocking a Mystery Command for the Tandy Radio Shack Science Fair Microcomputer Trainer from 1985

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