Replica 1: Difference between revisions
Nominated for deletion; see Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Replica 1. |
Blitterbug (talk | contribs) m Removed incorrect sentence about unavailability of the two models. Additionally, stock levels are not the purview of an encyclopaedia article. |
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[[Apple Inc.|Apple]] had no objection to the project since Wozniak had given his approval and the design is technically Wozniak's alone since it predates the company itself. Apple had previously released all materials regarding the Apple I to the [[Apple I Owners Club]].<ref>[http://www.applefritter.com/apple1/ Apple I Owners Club | Applefritter<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
[[Apple Inc.|Apple]] had no objection to the project since Wozniak had given his approval and the design is technically Wozniak's alone since it predates the company itself. Apple had previously released all materials regarding the Apple I to the [[Apple I Owners Club]].<ref>[http://www.applefritter.com/apple1/ Apple I Owners Club | Applefritter<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
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Briel Computers |
Briel Computers sells the replica in two models, one pre-assembled, and another as a build-it-yourself kit. |
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Earlier revision Replica 1 came with an available Serial I/O card which allowed programs written on or for the Replica 1 to be stored on the hard drive of any common [[Personal computer|PC]]. This was needed because the Replica 1 had no other ready means of program storage, since cassette drives (the Apple I's storage device) are in short supply. The I/O card can also be attached to original Apple I computers. |
Earlier revision Replica 1 came with an available Serial I/O card which allowed programs written on or for the Replica 1 to be stored on the hard drive of any common [[Personal computer|PC]]. This was needed because the Replica 1 had no other ready means of program storage, since cassette drives (the Apple I's storage device) are in short supply. The I/O card can also be attached to original Apple I computers. |
Revision as of 18:28, 30 July 2021
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Developer | Briel Computers |
---|---|
Release date | 2003 |
Introductory price | US$149.00 |
CPU | 6502 or 65C02 @ 1 MHz |
Memory | 32 KB SRAM, 8 KB EEPROM |
Display | 40x24 character text |
The Replica 1 is a clone of the Apple I designed by Vince Briel with permission from the Apple I's original creator Steve Wozniak. The Replica 1 is functionally a close copy of the original, but it is designed using much more modern parts on a smaller, simplified board design. The Replica 1 is designed around the same MOS Technology 6502 chip used as the core of the Apple I. Like the original, the Replica 1 utilizes simple AV in/out to connect to a television or other similar screen, and it maintains most of the original's functionality, such as the lack of a "delete" key.
Apple had no objection to the project since Wozniak had given his approval and the design is technically Wozniak's alone since it predates the company itself. Apple had previously released all materials regarding the Apple I to the Apple I Owners Club.[1]
Briel Computers sells the replica in two models, one pre-assembled, and another as a build-it-yourself kit.
Earlier revision Replica 1 came with an available Serial I/O card which allowed programs written on or for the Replica 1 to be stored on the hard drive of any common PC. This was needed because the Replica 1 had no other ready means of program storage, since cassette drives (the Apple I's storage device) are in short supply. The I/O card can also be attached to original Apple I computers.
The most recent model of the Replica 1 is the Replica 1 Plus, now sold by ReActivemicro. The Second Edition model integrated both the previous Serial I/O board plus a new USB interface into the main board. Other improvements included a wall mounted DC power supply replacing the previous model's reliance on a full PC power supply and a power on light indicator. The Third Edition model removed the USB interface and replaced the AVR microcontroller used to generate video with a Parallax Propeller chip. The Replica 1 Plus allows for a direct connection to the USB port on a computer for power and programming, and the addition of 2 ROMS mean that the user can switch between Apple 1 Basic or Woz monitor and Applesoft lite.[2]
The Replica 1 includes Apple I BASIC in ROM to allow quick and easy programming, as well as the KRUSADER Assembler that provides a powerful symbolic assembly programming environment, including a disassembler and a low-level debugger.[3]
The Replica 1 is not available for purchase on Vince Briel's website anymore and is now sold by ReActivemicro.[4]
Interfacing capability
The Replica 1 contains additional expansion ports for added system capability, these include:
- RS-232 Serial port
Used for interfacing with a home computer running a terminal emulation program, such as HyperTerminal for Windows, or ZTerm for OS X. This allows for quick data inputting for large programs, which is favourable over typing in such programs by hand.
- Apple 1 Slot
Used for connecting original or third party expansion boards to the Replica 1, such as the CFFA1 Card Reader and Multi I/O Board by Briel Computers.
- Apple 1 Edge Connector
Used for memory expansion boards
References
External links
- The Replica 1
- Replica 1 article
- Photographs of the Replica 1 at Flickr
- The KRUSADER Assembler
- Gagne, Ken Image gallery: Building an Apple-1 replica from scratch, Computerworld, 2008-08-14, story with pictures for assembling a Briel replica I from a kit
- ReActivemicro The Replica 1 is now sold here.