
The only thing which I guess isn't specific to my system that I have is the Elektor modified version of NIBLE BASIC (4K working from page 1, with RAM in page 2 upwards), that was listed in book 2. I modified Elbug for my setup, by extending into other EPROM space (improved MODIFY routine etc). So much so I had to increase EPROM to 32K to contain it.

#Super hexio code
Over the last 20 years I must have written about 24K code for controlling the synth and other things. I wrote an assembler/disassembler (in Sinclair QL BASIC) so I could write assembler source and send it to SC/MP serially at 9600 baud (using fileserver code running on SC/MP). I then decided it would be a useful stand alone system to control my Maplin 5600S synthesiser (built in 1979), through its simple digital interface. I got Elbug1, Elbug2 and NIBLE BASIC working on it. Eventually in the late 1980's I built a clone of the system with 16K RAM / 16K EPROM (split into configurable 4K pages). A few years later Elektor were selling off both SC/MPUTER books so I picked them up and for many years intended to build the system. He also detailed the programming of the INS8154 PIO/RAM chip, so I bought both chips to play with on breadboard. My first encounter with the SC/MP dates way back to 1981 when I got a copy of Ian R Sinclair's book 'Practical Microprocessor Systems' in which he detailed a minimal assessment system based on the INS8060, as a simple breadboard single-step computer. We'd love to hear of your experiences & how you got involved with the SC/MP, are you still actively working with it? Have you anything else in your archives?

Hi David, its great to find yet another SC/MP enthusiast, this seems to be THE gathering spot for scampers all over the globe.
