Bob Marsh, Lee Felsenstein and Gordon French started designing the Sol-20 between April and July 1975. The Sol-20 utilized the Intel 8080 8-bit microprocessor chip, running at 2 MHz. A major difference between the Sol-20 and most other machines of the era was its built-in video driver, which allowed it to be attached to a composite monitor for display. The Sol-20 consisted of a main motherboard (PCB) mounted at the bottom of the case, and a five slot S-100 bus card cage. The main PCB consisted of the CPU, memory, video display, I/O circuits. Inside the case included power supply, fan, and keyboard. The case was painted 'IBM blue' and the sides of the case were made of solid oiled walnut originally salvaged from a gun stock manufacturer.7
Processor Technology manufactured approximately 10,000 Sol-20 personal computers between 1977 and 1979. All Processor Technology products were available either fully assembled, or as electronic kits. Processor Technology also sold software on Compact Cassette. One side of the tape was recorded in CUTS format, and the other side was Kansas City standard format. Gary Ingram and Steven Dompier wrote the original software utilities. Lee Felsenstein wrote the original user manuals as a contractor.
Processor Technology also designed several S-100 bus boards. The boards were meant to be compatible with the circuits of Sol-20.
The Video Display Module 1 (VDM-1) was the original video display interface for S-100 bus systems.8 The board generates sixteen 64-character lines of upper and lower case typeface on any standard composite video monitor or a modified TV set. Utilizing a 1,024 byte (1K) segment of system memory, the VDM-1 provided memory-mapped I/O for high performance, and also included hardware support for scrolling. The VDM-1 Video Board was a great improvement over using a teletype machine or a serial attached terminals, and was popular for owners of other S-100 bus systems such as the IMSAI 8080.
Another popular product was the CUTS Tape I/O Interface S-100 board. The CUTS board offered standard interface for saving and reading data from cassette tape, supporting both the Kansas City standard format, as well as their own custom CUTS format. Lee Felsenstein was key participant of the development of Kansas City standard format, the first cross-system data transfer standard for microcomputers.
Freiberger (2000), 61-63 ↩
|Marsh, Robert (July 1975). "4KRA (4096 x 8 RAM) Static Memory Module". Homebrew Computer Club Newsletter. 1 (5). Menlo Park, CA: 2. http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/homebrewCC/HCC_Newsletter_V1_N05.pdf ↩
"Make a Giant of Your Minicomputer". Byte. 1 (14). Peterborough NH: Byte Publications: 72–73. October 1976. A Processor Technology advertisement showing a motherboard with eight add-in boards. ↩
Marsh, Robert; Lee Felsenstein (July 1979). "Build the SOL Intelligent Computer Terminal". Popular Electronics. 10 (1). Ziff Davis: 35–38. ↩
Veit (1993), 131-148 ↩
Freiberger (2000), 153-155 ↩
Lundin, Leigh (2011-10-09). "An Apple Today". Technology. Orlando: SleuthSayers.org. http://www.sleuthsayers.org/2011/10/apple-today.html ↩
Processor Technology (November 1975). "8800 Hardware". Byte. 1 (3). Peterborough, NH: Green Publishing: 75. Processor Technology advertisement. The VDM-1 Video Display Module for the Altair computer generated 16 lines of 64 characters on a black and white TV. Kit price was $160, assembled $225. The Cromemco TV Dazzler first appeared in the April 1976 issue of Byte ↩