Images-32 Site is getting /.’ed at the moment… a hand-made CPU, complete with hardware address translation, memory mapped I/O, and DMA, out of 200 74-series TTL chips wired together with thousands of individually wrapped wires. By using a port of Adam Dunkels’ uIP TCP/IP stack to the Magic-1, it currently serves up live web pages at an amazing speed of 3 MHz. [via] Link.

BY Phillip Torrone

Editor at large - Make magazine. Creative director - Adafruit Industries, contributing editor - Popular Science. Previously: Founded - Hack-a-Day, how-to editor - Engadget, Director of product development - Fallon Worldwide, Technology Director - Braincraft.

4 Responses to Hand-made Web Server, Built From 200 TTL Chips

  1. HitScan on said:

    This is the sort of thing I wanted to do ever since I read about how half-adders worked when I was a kid. :) Anyone want to throw together an article for Make:03 showing how to get a simple TTL CPU to grab data and perform some basic math? :D

  2. HitScan on said:

    This is the sort of thing I wanted to do ever since I read about how half-adders worked when I was a kid. :) Anyone want to throw together an article for Make:03 showing how to get a simple TTL CPU to grab data and perform some basic math? :D

  3. HitScan on said:

    This is the sort of thing I wanted to do ever since I read about how half-adders worked when I was a kid. :) Anyone want to throw together an article for Make:03 showing how to get a simple TTL CPU to grab data and perform some basic math? :D

  4. HitScan on said:

    Oops. Seems I’ve stumbled on a smallish commenting problem… Sorry about that. :)

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