@kenshirriff Thank you. I thought perhaps it helped engineers use (readily available?) 8085 support chips and adapt existing 8-bit boards to run 16-bit code (a bit like the 80386sx let you build an AT that could run 32-bit code), albeit more slowly.
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@kenshirriff Thank you. I thought perhaps it helped engineers use (readily available?) 8085 support chips and adapt existing 8-bit boards to run 16-bit code (a bit like the 80386sx let you build an AT that could run 32-bit code), albeit more slowly. No comments
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