This is basic board (3-input germanium NAND with indication if all inputs are 1s) that will be used here (and there #Clockwork germanium ):
Manufactured by oshpark.com
Another thing was taken from old Soviet phone (and sold to me through eBay ; ):
This one will be used to input decimal digits into calculator ;)
UPDATE (04/22): Soviet nixie tubes have arrived :)
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Oh yeah, i'll have to use that kind of dials one day :-D
Do they exist in hexadecimal ? :-P
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never seen anything different from decimal one ;)
Are you sure? yes | no
don't think so, this type of dial was invented for pulse-dial telephones specifically, and pulse-dial is a pretty inefficient avriable-length encoding not used anywhere else (but ideal for electromechanical automatic switchboards). anything computer-ish would have used keyboards from the start.
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It seems I'll have to limit to octal then :-D
Are you sure? yes | no
Nope, I remember a number of circuits from my childhood where
pulse-dials were used to enter digits into digital system built from TTL
chips ;)
BTW I plan to use rings of flip-flops to represent decimal
digits, so "pulse-dial" wheel looks like a natural choice from this point of
view :)
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I suspect those were more a consequence of the wide spread of PD telephones than anything.
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