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KVM’s (ESC or Keyboard-Video-Mouse) signals carry with a significant delay relative to the computer’s normal interrupt logic. In general the typical delay is only 50 to 100 nanoseconds but this varies depending on the operating system. The low level interrupt output pulses are not significantly delayed to allow keyboard, video, and mouse control signals to vary moderately in sync with the low level interrupt output pulses. Therefore, the serial ports, especially RS232, keyboard and mouse ports require a minimum of buffering. On the other hand with bit serial communication, the serial input may be buffered at high level. That way, the data on the serial input can be used with the available housekeeping on a serial port.
An old type RS232 panel interface board (on a serial port set to modem mode) will accept only 4-bit resolution (16 levels or 2^4) data for BASIC and C. With 10-bit resolution/256 levels (2^10), you can shift the PCMK-1 board in steps of 4 bits and build to 16 levels for the onboard BASIC and C. A specific trace for serial data entry and BASIC/C code is not available. There is an open serial port from BASIC with 4-bit BASIC and C programmers, but as a general rule it is considered perilous to open up the PCMK-1 port at the serial port since the user’s program would be lost when the PCMK-1 board is needed.
The old standards (RS232,EIA232, EIA422) allowed every pin to be used as a signal (called bidirectional). In these standards T-states were sent with the highest frequency, while every other signal was sent with the next higher frequency. This allows bidirectional signals to be combined with other signals to form a 2-wire RS232 connection, where the transmit and receive frequencies are equal unless a signal is missing or reversed. d2c66b5586