FM-7

FM-7
Manufacturer Fujitsu
Release date November 1982 (1982-11)
Introductory price ¥126000 (Japan)
Media Casette tape, 5¼-inch floppy disk
Operating system Fujitsu Disk Basic , OS-9, FLEX
CPU 2x MBL 68B09 clocked at 2MHz
Memory 64KB RAM, 48KB VRAM, 48KB ROM
Display 640 x 200 pixel resolution, 8 colours
Input Keyboard, Joystick
Dimensions 43.2 x 28.5 x 10.2
Predecessor FM-8
Successor FM Towns
Related articles TRS-80 Color Computer

FM-7 (Fujitsu Micro 7) is a home computer released in 1982 in Japan.

The Fujitsu FM-7 was Fujitsu's first entry into the Japanese home computer market, and for their debut computer, they chose to come out with a 6809-based personal computer very similar to Radio Shack's Color Computer.

Contents

Hardware

F-BASIC

The included "F-BASIC" is an enhanced version of Microsoft's Color BASIC. F-BASIC's additions to the standard Microsoft CoCo BASIC include the Japanese character set (katakana, and a few kanji), block graphics, three-voice music, the ability to have graphics appear on the default text screen, and some neat commands such as being able to take any string and print it out in various sizes (from tiny to huge) and directions (forward, backward, up, down, etc).

While there are a multitude of new commands on the FM-7 not found in Microsoft's CoCo BASIC, it is worth pointing out that the commands that ARE found in both machines operate in exactly the same fashion. Both Microsoft and Fujitsu share the copyright on the BASIC. There are also strings for TIME$ and DATE$, which access a temporary built-in internal clock, though if the power is turned off, the time and date are lost.

While the BASIC 'EDIT' command works the same as on the Radio Shack CoCo, the cursor position is important on the FM-7: there is a small keypad on the upper-right of the FM-7 with cursor-control keys (arrows, INSERT & DELETE), and wherever you decide to position the cursor, it will move it there, and affect whatever is underneath it.

Models

There were several models of the computer:

External links

References