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・ AIM Pages
・ Aim Pay-TV Corp.
・ AIM Phoneline
・ AIM Productions
・ Aim Right for the Holes in Their Lives
・ Aim Rocks
・ AIM Song
・ AIM Tell-A-Vision
・ AIM+
・ AIM-120 AMRAAM
・ AIM-152 AAAM
・ AIM-26 Falcon
・ AIM-4 Falcon
・ AIM-47 Falcon
・ AIM-54 Phoenix
AIM-65
・ AIM-68 Big Q
・ AIM-7 Sparrow
・ AIM-82
・ AIM-9 Sidewinder
・ AIM-92 Stinger
・ AIM-95 Agile
・ AIM-97 Seekbat
・ AIM1
・ AIM2
・ AIM25
・ Aima Bari
・ Aima Masomeen
・ Aima of the Maldives
・ AIMA prophecy


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AIM-65 : ウィキペディア英語版
AIM-65

The Rockwell AIM-65 computer was a development computer introduced in 1978 based on the MOS Technology 6502 microprocessor. The AIM-65 was essentially an expanded KIM-1 computer. Available software included a monitor with line at a time assembler/disassembler, BASIC interpreter, assembler, Pascal, PL/65, and FORTH development system. Available hardware included a floppy disk controller and a backplane for expansion.
== Features ==
Rockwell advertised the $375 AIM-65, with 1K RAM, as an "easy, inexpensive () ... for learning, designing, work or just fun". Standard software included the system console monitor software in ROM, called Advanced Interactive Monitor. It featured line assembler, disassembler, setting and viewing memory and registers, starting execution of other programs and more. Single stepping was made possible using non-maskable interrupt (NMI). The command prompt was the less-than sign "<", and on receiving a single character command, it added this input character and the greater-than sign ">". If the thermal printer was turned on, this would be output on a single line. The monitor included a number of service routines that could be accessed and used by a user's program to control I/O and code execution, and was fully documented, including source code.
The machine featured dual cassette tape control. This made it possible to write large assembly programs using the two pass assembler ROM. Source code in text was written twice consecutively to the input tape, and then the assembler, which could start/stop the input cassette tape using motor control was invoked. During the first pass the symbol table was built and stored in RAM. During the second pass symbols would be translated and code written out to the second tape, also using start/stop motor control. Being able to avoid storing code in RAM made it possible to save much space. It was however, still important to keep the symbols list short since RAM size was often no more than 4 KB.
In 1981 Rockwell introduced an improved model with a 40 character display as the AIM-65/40. An industrial chassis version was known as the System 65 and included a PROM burner and floppy drives. Rockwell was also a pioneer in solid-state storage devices, introducing "bubble memory" non-volatile expansion boards about 1980.
MTU made a "Visible Memory" card in 1978 that worked with the KIM-1 and AIM-65 computers, providing raster graphics display capability. MTU also made the first real time music synthesizer for a microcomputer; it worked with the KIM-1 and AIM-65, and featured a DAC with software providing 4 voices of 'wavetable-lookup synthesis.
In Spain they were distributed by Comelta. This company made various card expansions:
*CR-106 8 Kbytes of RAM
*CR-119 RAM / ROM / PROM expansion
*CR-120 Universal programming
*CR-115 Microcassette controller(two units)
*CR-113 Video controller
*CR-401 Board Bus Extension(Standard S-64)
Comelta assembled all the options in a single box to produce a new computer, the Comelta Drac-1. The first prototype used microcassetes, but definitive versions have two 8" floppy disk drives.
In the late 1970s, the Rockwell AIM-65, and successor System 65 became the first computers used on board a float in the Tournament of Roses Parade. Cal Poly Universities wrote their own animation control language to control hydraulic and motor actuators on floats for many years. In 2003, some of these 27-year-old computers were still in use controlling various displays and creatures at a high tech Halloween show near Alexandria, Virginia, U.S.A.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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