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Date   : Fri, 19 Mar 1999 16:14:13 -0000
From   : Chezz <achester@...>
Subject: Re: the ultimate in bbc emulation

RS Components sell a keyboard encoder chip that would probably work with a
BBC Micro keyboard. It is manufactured by Holtek p/n. HT6547E , RS. Stock
No. 313-579 Price £2.28 + Postage and the dreaded VAT.

I would be interested to know of the outcome if you give it a try.

Chezz.

-----Original Message-----
From: Fraser, Colin J [mailto:Colin.Fraser@...]
Sent: 19 March 1999 13:56
To: 'Mark Usher'; BBC MICRO Mailing List POSTINGS (E-mail)
Subject: RE: [BBC-Micro] the ultimate in bbc emulation


> -----Original Message-----
> From: Mark Usher [mailto:marku@...]
> Sent: 19 March 1999 13:28
> To: BBC MICRO Mailing List POSTINGS (E-mail)
> Subject: [BBC-Micro] the ultimate in bbc emulation
> 
> A while ago JGH was talking about attaching a PC keyboard to 
> a BBC, and how
> it could be achieved. Now, in one of my rare moments, it 
> occurred to me that
> it would be the ultimate to attach a BBC keyboard to a PC, 
> just to get the
> correct feel of an emulator.
> 
> Any thoughts apart from those on the state of my mental health :-)

You can pick up a PC keyboard for next to nothing these days. You could
extract the controller chip from a cheapo PC keyboard, and connect it up to
the switch matrix of a BBC keyboard. I doubt the matrix layout would map
correctly to what the PC controller was expecting, so your emulator would
need to use a custom key map. If your PC can cope with the keyboard being
removed and reconnected without rebooting, then you could add a switch box
to switch from the normal keyboard to the BBC keyboard when you start up
your emulator.
If you wanted to remap the BBC keyboard matrix to use as a standard PC
keyboard (missing a few keys of course), you could code your own keyboard
scanning software for a microcontroller, and give it a PS2 serial output.
The complement to this would be to build a PS2 keyboard to BBC interface
that would allow you to use the PS2'd BBC keyboard with a real BBC.
Whether this is worthwhile probably depends on how many people have BBC
keyboards from unrepairable Beebs.


Colin f
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