When I was investigating the National Panasonic VP-8177A signal generator (with digital frequency and option displays), I was suprised that it had no microprocessor control, but it did have a battery-backed Intel 5101L 256*4 bit SRAM (separate input and output buses) for memory (I devised a simple 3-chip circuit with commonly available ICs to make it work with a modern bidirectional bus SRAM).
Another example of test equipment with digital displays without microprocessor control include a 600MHz frequency counter (1984 ARRL article).
I've seen video arcade machines without microprocessor control (discrete logic, no CPU or PLDs including ROMs) from the early 70s, most notably Atari's Pong.
I am curious, but are there oscilloscopes with on-screen character displays without microprocessor control, or even digital voltmeters without microprocessor control?
Another example of test equipment with digital displays without microprocessor control include a 600MHz frequency counter (1984 ARRL article).
I've seen video arcade machines without microprocessor control (discrete logic, no CPU or PLDs including ROMs) from the early 70s, most notably Atari's Pong.
I am curious, but are there oscilloscopes with on-screen character displays without microprocessor control, or even digital voltmeters without microprocessor control?

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