Motorola 68000 Educational Computer Board Explained

The Motorola 68000 Educational Computer Board (MEX68KECB) was a development board for the Motorola 68000 microprocessor, introduced by Motorola in 1981. It featured the 68K CPU, memory, I/O devices and built-in educational and training software.

Hardware

Software

The board has built-in 16K ROM memory containing assembly/disassembly/stepping/monitoring software called TUTOR. The software was operated using command-line interface over a serial link, and provided many commands useful in machine code debugging. Memory contents (including programs) could be dumped via a serial link to a file on the host computer. The file was transferred in Motorola's S-Record format. Similarly, files from host could be uploaded to the board's arbitrary user memory area.

Price

The price of the Motorola ECB at launch was [1] which was relatively inexpensive for a computer with an advanced for that time 16/32-bit CPU.

Use

According to the manual, for basic use only a dumb terminal and power source are required. However, it seems that in colleges the board was predominantly used in connection with a time-sharing host computer to teach assembly language programming and other computer science subjects.[2]

References

MC68000 Educational Computer Board User's Manual

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The M68000 Educational Computer Board . BYTE Magazine . 1983-10-01 . 2021-08-13.
  2. Book: The Atmel AVR Microcontroller: MEGA and XMEGA in Assembly and C . 14 January 2013 . Han-Way Huang. 978-1285500089 .