MOS Technology TED


The 7360 Text Editing Device was an integrated circuit made by MOS Technology, Inc. It was a video chip that also contained sound generation hardware, DRAM refresh circuitry, interval timers, and keyboard input handling. It was designed for the Commodore Plus/4 and 16. Packaging consisted of a JEDEC-standard 48-pin DIP.

Video capabilities

The video capabilities provided by the TED were largely a subset of those in the VIC-II. The TED supported five video modes :
These were largely unchanged from the corresponding VIC-II modes aside from different register and memory mapping. However, the TED lacked the sprite capabilities of the VIC-II, and so game animation had to be done with programmable characters like on the VIC-20. This tended to restrict the graphics of C16/Plus 4 games versus the C64. The sprites used 2/3 of the die area of the VIC-II pushing the transistor count over that of the CPU. Reduction to one sprite would have reduced this area by eight acceptable for a computer supposed to be cheaper than the C64. TED caches the color attributes on-chip increasing the SRAM from 40 bytes to 75 bytes and does away with the external color RAM.
The TED did include two features that the VIC-II lacked: luminance control and blinking text. Fifteen of its 16 colors could be assigned one of 8 luminance values, thus making the TED capable of displaying a far wider array of colors than the VIC-II. The full palette of 121 colors is shown below.
As more accurate color values inside color palette table is shown below:

Sound capabilities

The TED featured a simple tone generator that produced two channels of audio. The first channel produced a square wave, and the second could produce either a square wave or white noise. Between the two channels you could hear either two tones or one tone plus noise. This tone generator was designed for business applications, and did not provide the extensive sound features found in the SID chip.

Other features

The TED includes three 16-bit interval timers, which consist of down counters operating at the master clock frequency. They can generate IRQs on underflow. The chip also contains an I/O port, which is used on the Plus/4 and 16 to scan the keyboard and joystick. In addition, it handles bank switching, used by the operating system to maximize the amount of RAM available to Commodore BASIC.
TED has a higher priority on DRAM access than the CPU. Thus in the borders the CPU must be able to run at full system clock, but in the pixel area it is throttled down to half the clock rate. An undesirable feature of the chip is its well-known tendency to destroy itself through overheating. To preserve a computer which employs this chip in working order, it is recommended to improve its cooling.