COSMAC 1801, 1802 - Dates
COSMAC 1801, 1802 - Dates
Introduction:
This Web page is about earliest dates of development, introduction and production of the RCA COSMAC 1802
and 1802 microprocessors. Various documents are cited to provide dates. Thanks to Dave Ruske of cosmacelf for
his references and reviews of early publications. Also to the TCNJ Sarnoff Collection. This is one of many Web
pages which support the COSMAC 1802 "Membership Card" created by Lee Hart.
dates
pre-microprocessor design From 1971 forward, Joseph Weisbecker, a RCA programmer and engineer, and a
number of RCA engineers and techs, built a series of TTL-based computers, of a design which later became the
COSMAC microprocessor and video controller. By 1973, several "FRED" computers were in use by these
engineers to develop code, coding languages, and games. The languages were essentially use of routines or
macro-instruction libraries of I/O and other functions. The FRED computer supported simple block graphics,
audio, and audio-cassette file storage - features of the VIP and later COSMAC computers and other video-based
microcomputers to come. The FRED also supported a simple punched-card reader, cards were hand-punched.
Much of the coding was in hex object code, hand assembled on preprinted coding sheets.
In late 2013 I became aware of internal RCA Laboratory Research Reports, available on-line, which describe
COSMAC development. My review of these is early and tentative, but they "date" a number of COSMAC
developments for FRED, COSMAC as microprocessors, and the MicroTutor and MicroKit development tools.
Here's my Web page where I review the 1973, 1974 and 1975 reports. In 2016, copies of Weisbecker and other's
documents on those TTL-based prototypes, appeared from the Hagley Library. Here's a rough timeline of what I
believe those reports & documents describe:
COSMAC processor: Before the processor was designated "1801", papers about the COSMAC microprocessor
were published in 1974 and 1975, including in IEEE Computer magazine, and in conference proceedings. Many
were authored by Joseph Weisbecker. The earliest COSMAC microprocessor design publication, is a March
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1974 IEEE Intercon paper. An RCA Engineer magazine article is dated Feb/Mar 1974. On October 15, 1974,
patent number 3,970,998 was filed for the COSMAC architecture. A copy of the RCA data sheet "Digital
Integrated Circuits - Developmental Types - TA6889, TA6890" is dated "2-75" (Feb 1975)"
COSMAC 1801: RCA document MPM-101 was printed in May 1975, and describes the COSMAC
architecture, but only names it "1801" in an update notice. RCA document ICAN-6416 is an application note on
COSMAC microprocessors, which was printed in Oct 1975.
COSMAC 1802: A preliminary RCA datasheet on the 1802 was printed in Feb 1976.
Weisbecker authored the COSMAC ELF kit article in Popular Electronics beginning in August 1976. The ELF
and its successors were simple and popular 1802 microprocesor kits which could be operated and programmed
without any other devices needed. Variations of this kit have been available ever since, including into the 21st
century.
references
I have a Web page about the earliest TTL prototypes, "System 00" and "FRED" which include links to original
documents about those computers by name.
This is the cover of the RCA document MPM-101 titled "microprocessor Products" by RCA. It describes the
COSMAC 1801 architecture, apparently before it was named "1801". This was a two-chip implementation. Later
in this document I provide a Web site reference to obtain a copy.
This is the title page of the RCA document MPM-101. Note "copyright 1975" and "printed in USA 5/75". That
suggests a publication date of May 1975.
This is a note inside the cover page, of the RCA document MPM-101. It's the only reference in the document to
"COSMAC CPD1801" and it suggests this document was written BEFORE the 1801 was released as a physical
product. It says the 1801 has or lacks features which were documented in this publication.
This is the cover of the RCA document "preliminary datasheet, Microprocessor Products CDP1802D
CDP1802CD" with a descriptor "printed in USA 2/76". that suggests a publication date of Feb 1976.
This is the cover of the RCA document "Digital Integrated Circuits, Application Note ICAN-6416, An
introduction to Microprocessors and the RCA COSMAC COS/MOS Microprocessor". with a descriptor "printed
in USA 10/75". that suggests a publication date of Oct 1975. Copies of this note may be in some RCA COSMAC
microprocessor data books. Note: if this document is not available online currently, let me know and I'll
provide a PDF of it, either here or to Dave Ruske's cosmacelf site.
This is the back of the RCA document ICAN-6416. There are several references to documents by title, author,
publisher and date. among them are a March 1974 IEEE Intercon conference paper by Weisbecker on COSMAC
microprocessors; IEEE Computer magazine articles for March 1974 and August 1974; and 1975 references to
"microprocessors" in three other publications.
The Sarnoff Collection at The College of New Jersey has a collection of documents and artifacts from Joseph
Weisbecker's work. These include early games, COSMAC computers, and an earlier TTL implementation of the
COSMAC microprocessor called "FRED". As of late 2013 the cataloging and curation of these are in progress,
but some items are on public display as part of Sarnoff history. In 2013 I assisted the Collection in preserving,
documenting and archiving these items, among other related electronic technology.
I assisted the Sarnoff Collection again in 2017-18; a major achivement was to digitize their collection of over
100 audio-cassette program tapes from Joseph Weisbecker's mid-1970' COSMAC archives. By late 2018,
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those were converted back to binaries and run under emulation. The tapes held by the Hagley Library were also
digitized by the Hagley, and then converted and emulated. Read the amazing details of that effort on this linked
Web page.
According to the Sarnoff Museum curator, 1970-71 was the time frame for work on the original invention of the
COSMAC processor; no reference was cited. Published references in 1974 are the earliest things I can put a solid
reference to.
March 25 and 26, 1974 - 1974 IEEE Intercon technical program session by Norman P. Swales and Joseph A.
Weisbecker of RCA, session 17/2. There's no 1801 designation in the paper; the architecture is referred to only
as COSMAC, here. Numerous missing opcodes in the paper (most of the 7x opcodes) and a statement that
"COSMAC is presently implemented on two chips" suggest that the paper refers to the 1801. A couple
paragraphs later, the paper says "It is anticipated that the processor will soon be implemented on a single chip."
March 1974 article "A Simplified Microcomputer Architecture." by Joe Weisbecker in IEEE Computer magazine
pages 41-47. The article reprint number is 0703041. The instruction set isn't described in as much detail in this
article, and again the microprocessor is only referred to as COSMAC. The article suggests the 1802 may have
been in the works: "Since a single-chip microcomputer promises minimum cost, the architecture was constrained
to a 40-pin interface."
August 1974, Weisbecker again published in IEEE Computer with "A Practical, Low-Cost, Home/School
Microprocessor System" on pages 20-31. He describes a COSMAC-based computer named FRED (Flexible
Recreational and Educational Device), a precursor of the VIP. "The basic FRED system comprises the RCA
COSMAC microprocessor, 1024 bytes of RAM, a simple hex keyboard, an inexpensive audio cassette player,
and the user's own TV set." The article gives a high-level overview of Pixie graphics (though not named as such)
and cites the preceding two publications as references. About half the article is pure evangelism, explaining the
tasks such a machine could be put to and how it could be commercialized.
On October 15, 1974, patent number 3,970,998 "Microprocessor architecture" was filed for the COSMAC
architecture. It was published Jul 20, 1976.
note - patent 3970998 refers to another patent 3,798,615: "Computer system with program-controlled program
counters" Application Date 1972-10-02; Publication Date 1974-03-19; Inventor Weisbecker, Joseph A; assigned
to RCA. In turn it's cited by 9 other patents. This patent talks about implementing a "Micro" computer
architecture on one or two additional chips. Thanks to Dr. Vincent Crabtree for this reference.
Other sites
A number of private Web pages and various group pages, cover the COSMAC 1802. There's modest 21st century
interest, as more RCA material and hardware and software is found. Web search will find many such resources.
bitsavers.org (and its mirrors, look them up) have a number of RCA COSMAC documents as document PDF's as
of 2013. "Users_Manual_For_The_COSMAC_Microprocessor_May75.pdf" is one of them, under their PDF's of
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manuals and under RCA and COSMAC. Their copy of that manual also includes a scan of the 1974 IEEE
Intercon paper; a Computer Design magazine article from april 1974; and a Feb 1974 RCA press release on their
CMOS two-chip microprocessor. Bitsavers also has the 1801 datasheet as document
"TA6889_TA6890_Data_Sheet_Feb75.pdf". (Thanks to Will Donnelly for the datasheet reference.)
decodesystems.com has a series of RCA articles on its site. The earliest includes a Feb/Mar 1974 article in RCA
Engineer magazine "Simplifying Microcomputer Architecture" by J. Weisbecker with the note "manuscript
recieved November 26 1973".
Dave Ruske operates cosmacelf.com which provides early and current information about the COSMAC 1802.
Dave moderates the cosmacelf Yahoo discussion email list.
Bill Degnan obtained an early RCA MicroKit with the two-chip processor during 2013. The two CPUs are labled
"TC1084 - 7509" implied date March 1975, and "TC1085 7449" date of Dec 1974. He found this reference to
the early MicroKit from RCA: an article on bitsavers.org, about the Microkit that came out later in 1975.
Published in Microcomputer Digest for Oct 1975. I have some software notes about that MicroKit on this linked
Web page.
The Sarnoff Collection at The College of New Jersey has a collection of documents and artifacts from Joseph
Weisbecker's COSMAC work. The link is to a database of cataloged items. Other pages and related sites show
the exhibited collection.
Contact information:
Herb Johnson
New Jersey, USA
To email @ me, see see my home Web page.
This page and edited content is copyright Herb Johnson (c) 2018. Copyright of other contents beyond brief
quotes, is held by those authors. Contact Herb at www.retrotechnology.com, an email address is available on that
page..
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