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Difference between revisions of "PC-8801"

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The '''PC-8801'''
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The '''PC-8801''' is a home and business computer released by [[NEC]] in 1981. It is a successor to the [[PC-8001]], and was, for a short period, NEC's flagship home computer.
 
 
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==Hardware==
 
==Hardware==
The PC-8801 was designed as a successor to the [[PC-8001]] (and is backwards compatible with the older machine), and was, for a short period, NEC's flagship home computer.
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The PC-8801 makes a number of significant improvements over the PC-8001 architecture. Rather than housing the machine within a keyboard (which would then be extended with add-on boxes), it shares a similar design with the IBM PC 5150 released some months prior, being a rectangular box that the user plugs components into. However, unlike IBM, NEC continued to ask its users to spend extra on external disk drives or cassette decks; something corrected in later revisions of the hardware.  
  
 
With the release of the [[PC-9801]] in 1982, the PC-8801 would be positioned as the mainstream, mid-range machine from NEC (with the [[PC-6001]] taking the budget market). It would remain a popular platform in Japan until being replaced with the [[PC-8801 mkII SR]] in 1985.
 
With the release of the [[PC-9801]] in 1982, the PC-8801 would be positioned as the mainstream, mid-range machine from NEC (with the [[PC-6001]] taking the budget market). It would remain a popular platform in Japan until being replaced with the [[PC-8801 mkII SR]] in 1985.

Revision as of 17:54, 28 January 2022

PC8801.jpg
PC-8801
Manufacturer: NEC
Release Date RRP Code
PC-8801
JP
¥228,000228,000

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The PC-8801 is a home and business computer released by NEC in 1981. It is a successor to the PC-8001, and was, for a short period, NEC's flagship home computer.

Hardware

The PC-8801 makes a number of significant improvements over the PC-8001 architecture. Rather than housing the machine within a keyboard (which would then be extended with add-on boxes), it shares a similar design with the IBM PC 5150 released some months prior, being a rectangular box that the user plugs components into. However, unlike IBM, NEC continued to ask its users to spend extra on external disk drives or cassette decks; something corrected in later revisions of the hardware.

With the release of the PC-9801 in 1982, the PC-8801 would be positioned as the mainstream, mid-range machine from NEC (with the PC-6001 taking the budget market). It would remain a popular platform in Japan until being replaced with the PC-8801 mkII SR in 1985.

Technical Specifications

List of games

References



PC-8800 series hardware
PC-8801 (1981) | PC-8801 mkII (1983) | PC-8801 mkII SR (TR | FR | MR | FH | MH | FA | MA | FE | MA2 | FE2 | MC) (1985-1989) | PC-88 VA (VA2 | VA3) (1987-1988)
stuff
haven't worked it all out yet