Computer museum tonh
Last update June 2006 Theosophy :What humans can understand about Nature and Life on this earth
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      Computers

Homecomputers
Acorn
Acorn BBC
Acorn Electron
Amstrad
Amstrad PC
Amstrad PPC640
Apple
Apple flag
Apple II
Motherboard Apple II
Floppydiskdriver Apple II
Apple IIc
Apple III
Apple Lisa
Mac
Signatures in Mac
Atari
Atari 400
Atari 1040
Commodore
Commodore VIC-20
Commodore 16
Commodore 64
Amiga 500
PET 2001
Epson
Epson HX20
Epson PX 8
Hewlett-Packard
HP 150
HP 85
Sinclair
Sinclair ZX80
Sinclair ZX81
Sinclair Spectrum
Sinclair QL
Tandy / Radio Shack
TRS80 Model 1
TRS80 Model 3
Color Computer
Model 102
Others
MEK6800D2
DAI
Superbrain
Cromemco
Exidy Sorcerer
Sharp MZ80K
Video Genie
Newbrain
TI 99/4
Philips P2000

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Acorn BBC Acorn Electron Amstrad PC Amstrad PPC640 Apple flag Apple II Motherboard Apple II Floppydiskdriver Apple II Apple IIc Apple III Apple Lisa Mac Signatures in Mac Atari 400 Atari 1040 Commodore VIC-20 Commodore 16 Commodore 64 Amiga 500 PET 2001 Epson HX20 Epson PX 8 HP 150 HP 85 Sinclair ZX80 Sinclair ZX81 Sinclair Spectrum Sinclair QL TRS80 Model 1 TRS80 Model 3 Color Computer Model 102 MEK6800D2 DAI Superbrain Cromemco Exidy Sorcerer Sharp MZ80K Video Genie Newbrain TI 99/4 Philips P2000

Homecomputers

This section is the most important section of the museum, considering the subject and time-span of the museum. It comprises the computers as there were before IBM set the standard with the IBM-PC. It are mainly 8 bit computers programmable in Basic. Some have only support for entering machine language in hexadecimal but can be expanded with terminals to become in every way like a Basic computer. Data storage is mostly on cassette-tape and sometimes floppies
These were the first machines where many people learned to program at home and where computer games for the masses (inclusing illegal copies) started their industy.

TdH