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Jeff Duntemann contributed these photos of some unusual 1802 projects.
At right, meet Cosmo Klein, the all-COSMAC robot. Jeff writes that "in addition to the VIP on his chest (which managed his face video and nothing else) he had a wire-wrapped machine inside his body, and a built-in OAE paper tape reader for getting his software up and running.
(I punched the tapes on a DEC PDP11 system at Loyola University,
where a friend worked at that time. The code was all written in
binary, by hand.)"
Jeff Duntemann's 1802-based robot, Cosmo.
The COSMAC IMP printer.
At left is the COSMAC IMP (Inexpensive thermal Matrix Printer), designed and built by Jeff for 1802-based systems. The article on its construction was turned down by Popular Electronics in 1982; they said the ELF's days were past. (Wonder what they'd think of this website?)

Want to share photos of your favorite 1802-based creation? Send 'em in ! Please let me know how you'd like to be credited and whether you'd like a link to your email address and/or personal website. Requests for anonymity will also be respected.

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