Saturday, November 7, 2020

One-Bit Computer

The upside of piracy is that I am able to find my own designs on the Internet which I have lost. Yesterday I went looking for a 1-bit computer I designed, called the Perpetual Projects Register, and downloaded it before it is removed. I found it on a Turkish website. This is the PCB on the right. It had a keyboard, a memory, a display, and it employed sequential logic. But nothing like a "real computer". For instance, the keyboard only had two keys. It cost £9 to build (about R200). OBSERVATION: Today we have 64-bit computers, such as the one I am using now. One-bit computers were briefly in use about fifty years ago. Early Wang computers were one-bit.

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