Loki (computer)
Sinclair home computer cancelled in 1986 / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Loki was the code name for a cancelled home computer developed at Sinclair Research during the mid-1980s.[1][2] The name came from the Norse god Loki, god of mischief and thieves. Loki was based on the ZX Spectrum, but intended to rival the Amiga for video games.
Quick Facts Type, Release date ...
Type | Home computer |
---|---|
Release date | Cancelled |
Introductory price | £200 |
Operating system | SuperBASIC variant, CP/M |
CPU | Z80 @ 7 MHz and equivalent |
Memory | 128 KB (1MB max) |
Removable storage | Floppy disk. |
Display | 512×256 with 16 colours, 256×212 with 64 or 256 colours |
Graphics | Rasterop chip |
Sound | 8-bit DAC |
Input | MIDI, lightpen, joystick |
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Loki followed two earlier, aborted research projects from Sinclair: the 68008-based SuperSpectrum home computer (cancelled in 1982) and the LC3 game console (cancelled in 1983).[3]