Videoton TV-Computer
A Videoton TVC home computer main unit and power supply | |
Also known as | TVC |
---|---|
Developer | Videoton |
Manufacturer | Videoton[1][2] |
Type | home computer |
Release date | around 1986 |
Units sold | around 12000 |
Operating system | TVC OS, UPM, BASIC |
CPU | Zilog Z80 compatible |
Memory | 32/64 kilobyte |
Graphics |
128×240/16 colors, 256×240/4 colors, 512×240/2 colors (b&w) |
The TV-Computer (or TVC in short) is an 8-bit home computer which was mmanufactured by the Hungarian company Videoton around 1986. The computer was based on the Enterprise (computer) and had a built-in BASIC interpreter. Programs could be loaded via tape[3] or floppy. It had a built-in joystick and a keyboard with Hungarian letters and nine function keys.
There are three different models of the TVC:
- 32k which has 32 Kb of RAM
- 64k which has 64 Kb of RAM
- 64k+ which has 64 Kb of RAM and a newer BASIC interpreter (v2.2) and more video RAM (64 Kb instead of 16 Kb)
The TVC has three graphical modes: 128×240/16 colors, 256×240/4 colors, and 512×240/2 colors (black and white). Few programs existed for the computer. Many of these were written by dedicated amateurs and were distributed by mail.
References
- ↑ Videoton TV-Computer, Old-Computers.com Museum
- ↑ Videoton TVC (TV-Computer) from 1983, MEGA – Museum of Electronic Games & Art
- ↑ Videoton TV Computer Tape File Converter, Google code
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