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Part 2: Ethernet-Equipped RabbitCore
Modules
by Fred Eady
Start ı The
Networking Core ı Code Names and Comedy
ı Where and Why ı Completing
Initialization Down to Business
ı Now What? ı Sources
and PDF
Last month, Greg Lake of Emerson, Lake,
and Palmer was here visiting the Florida room and, while tutoring
me on bass guitar, he suggested that the first subject in this series
of Z-World and Rabbit Semiconductor articles should center on the
new Z-World BL2000.
On the way back from dropping Greg off
at the airport, my mind wandered back to a time before computers roamed
the earth in great numbers. Those were the days of Osbourne, Tandy,
Altair 8800, and the Southwest Technical Products Corp. 6800. The
SWTPC 6800 had a whopping 32K of RAM and ran at a blistering 980 kHz.
All this came in a rather large (but elegant) enclosure. The smallest
RabbitCore module sports 128K of RAM, 256K of flash memory, and runs
at 22.1 MHz. Itıs a bit larger than an Elvis commemorative postage
stamp.
A computer is a computer. No matter how
big or how fast, the job is always the sameıto move and manipulate
electronic or mechanical bits that represent data to the user. Iım
sure the IMSAI 8080 hooked to a mechanical TeleType was the catıs
meow back in 1976. In fact, I knew a NASA guy back then who used the
IMSAI 8080 and TeleType to track stock market trends. He even made
plots on the TeleType. What differentiates todayıs computing devices
from that now ancient IMSAI? In a word, networking.
The government, the military, and some
universities were way ahead of the curve back then. Ethernet and the
beginnings of what we now know as the Internet were sprouting in the
fertile soil of the Xerox Alto workstation and ARPA project. Microsoft
and Apple later tasted the fruit of the Xerox vines and we all prospered
from the ARPA Net. I did some checking and Ethernet was not an option
for any of the dinosaur computers I mentioned earlier. Serial communications
was the big thing and the Internet was something college professors
used for research and the military used to transfer "intelligence."
In this offering, Iım going to use the
Rabbit Semiconductor RCM2100 Development Kit to give you some insight
into using the networking facilities of the new Ethernet-equipped
RabbitCore modules. Iım not going to concentrate on the hardware,
as we already know its capabilities. Instead, Iım going to approach
this from the software and standards point of view. As youıll see,
the hardware will speak for itself. Itıs already talking in Photo
1.
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| Photo 1ıThe LEDs arenıt stock.
I had some personal problems while adding the extra LEDs that
come with the RCM2100 Development Kit. So, I had to replace
them all so the picture would be pretty. The Sipex RS-232 IC,
caps, and header pins also come as component parts of the RCM2100
Development Kit. |
NEXT
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ıCircuit Cellar, the Magazine for Computer Applications. Posted with
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