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Tulip System-1

Personal computer made by Tulip Computers


Summary

Personal computer made by Tulip Computers

FieldValue
nameTulip System I
imageTulip system 1 (white bg).jpg
captionTulip System I microcomputer
manufacturerTulip Computers
typepersonal computer
release_date
osCP/M-86, MS-DOS 2.0
cpuIntel 8086
cpu_speed8 MHz
memory128 – 896 KB
storageOptional: 5 or 10 MB hard disk
displayText: characters and semigraphics; Graphics: and color, monochrome
graphicsMotorola 6845 & NEC μPD7220
connectivityRS-232, Parallel port
website

The Tulip System I is a 16-bit personal computer based on the Intel 8086 and made by Tulip Computers, formerly an import company for the Exidy Sorcerer, called Compudata Systems.

Hardware

Tulip System I is based around the Intel 8086 microprocessor with a 16-bit architecture, running at 8 MHz, almost twice the speed of the IBM PC XT which was launched only a few months earlier in July 1983.

The standard configuration includes 128 KB of RAM, expandable to 896 KB (much more than the 640 KB of the original PC) in units of 128 KB increments.

Its Motorola 6845-based video display controller could display text in 8 different fonts with support for different languages, including a (Videotex-based) font with pseudo graphic symbols for displaying pixel graphics in text mode.

The video display generator could also display graphics with a or (color) or (monochrome) pixel resolution using its built-in NEC 7220 video display coprocessor, which had hardware supported drawing functions, with an advanced set of bit-block transfers it could do line generating, arc, circle, ellipse, ellipse arc, filled arc, filled circle, filled ellipse, filled elliptical arc and many other commands.

It has the possibility to use an Intel 8087 math coprocessor, which increased the speed to 200 kflops, which was near mainframe data at that time.

It included a SASI hard disk interface (a predecessor of the SCSI-standard) and was optionally delivered with a 5 MB or 10 MB hard disk. The floppy disk size was 400 KB (10 sectors, instead of 8 or 9 with the IBM PC) or 800 KB (80 tracks).

Software

After initially using CP/M-86, it quickly switched to using generic MS-DOS 2.00. There was a rudimentary IBM BIOS-emulator, which allowed the user to use WordStar and a few other IBM-PC software, but Compudata B.V. shipped WordStar and some other software as adopted software for this computer. There was programming support by Compudata B.V. with MS-Basic, MS-Pascal and MS-Fortran. On a private base, TeX and Turbo Pascal were ported to the Tulip System I.

References

References

  1. Warm. (1998). "Tulip system 1".
  2. "Compudata Tulip System 1".
  3. "1000 BiT - Computer's description".
  4. (2023). "Beschrijving Tulip System I".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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