I know at least some folks here will appreciate this costume. Not mine, but the image was shared with me.

#Zardos

Projector Room 158 - Deep Dune Fear - GarethMyles.com

Dune Part Two, Deep Fear,Sean Connery, Noomi Repace, Octopus Murders, Hanover Street, Ripley, Sugar, The Evil That Men Do

GarethMyles.com
@jcrabapple weird #zardos vibe there.

2023 here we come!

#zardos

Tiny Operating System For Tiny Computer

Before the World Wide Web became ubiquitous as the de facto way to access electronic information, there were many other ways of retrieving information online. One of the most successful of these was Minitel, a French videotex service that lasted from 1980 all the way until 2012. But just because the service has been deactivated doesn't mean its hardware can't be used for modern builds like this Arduino-based operating system. (Google Translate from French)

Called ZARDOS, the operating system is built to run on an Arduino MEGA although a smaller version is available for the Uno. The Arduino is connected by a serial cable to the Minitel terminal. It can take input from a keyboard and PS/2 mouse and displays video on the terminal screen with the same cable. There is functionality built-in for accessing data on a cartridge system based on SD cards which greatly expands the limited capabilities of the Atmel chip as well, and there is also support for a speaker and a Videotex printer.

Even though the build uses a modern microcontroller, it gives us flashbacks to pre-WWW days with its retro terminal. All of the code is available on the project site for anyone looking to build an Arduino-based operating system, although it will take a little bit of hardware hacking to build a Minitel terminal like this. Either way, it's a great way to revive some antique French hardware similar to a build we've seen which converts one into a Linux terminal.

Thanks to [troisieme_type] for the tip!

#retrocomputing #arduino #atmel #france #french #mega #minitel #operatingsystem #zardos

Tiny Operating System For Tiny Computer

Before the World Wide Web became ubiquitous as the de facto way to access electronic information, there were many other ways of retrieving information online. One of the most successful of these wa…

Hackaday