thumb|upright|AIM-65 thumb|right|Comelta Drac-1 thumb|right|Comelta Drac-1 and expansion box thumb|right|Back of expansion box
thumb|upright|AIM-65 thumb|right|Comelta Drac-1 thumb|right|Comelta Drac-1 and expansion box thumb|right|Back of expansion box
The Rockwell AIM-65 computer is a development computer introduced in 1978 based on the MOS Technology 6502 microprocessor. The AIM-65 is essentially an expanded KIM-1 computer. Available software included a line-oriented machine code monitor, BASIC interpreter, assembler, Pascal, PL/65, and Forth development system. Available hardware included a floppy disk controller and a backplane for expansion.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).