
I was contacted a few days ago by a gentleman named Paul Duncan of Electronic Services Industrial & Marine in Temuka, down near Timaru. He was repairing a marine communications system and had traced the fault to the embedded CPU. The CPU is a Texas Instruments TMS9900 - the same CPU that powers the infamously unsuccessful TI 99/4 and 99/4a microcomputers. The communications system in question is onboard the NIWA Research Vessel Tangaroa - a ship the underwent a complete refit just over a year ago, and most recently in the news for dropping off Happy Feet, the confused Emperor penguin found on a Kapiti beach.
Apparently the RV Tangaroa can't put to sea until the comms is repaired, and given the lead times getting anything from overseas at this time of year, Paul looked closer to home, stumbling across my web site. I have a TI99/4a in working but damaged condition that I was keeping for parts, so I was happy to help out. The chip is a 16 bit processor, probably the first such to be fitted to a microcomputer. It has a massive 64-pin DIL package, and is soldered into the board, so I decided to send the complete board down and let the experts remove it with the right tools. The chip in this machine is an AMI manufactured part, the S9900P, which is rated for up to a whopping 3.3Mhz!

They should receive the board tomorrow, and I hope to hear good news soon after that
