NEC PC-100
Japanese home computer from 1983 / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The NEC PC-100 was a Japanese home computer available on October 13, 1983. It operated on 8086 CPU 7 MHz, 128 KB RAM, 128 KB VRAM, a Japanese language capable keyboard and a two-button mouse. It had three models and its color monitor, PC-KD651, which could be used vertically or horizontally, had a price tag of 198,000 yen. Its biggest advantage over other computers of that time was its high graphical capability of 720 by 512 with a selection of 16 color out of 512 color available on its high end model30. Its OS was MS-DOS and was also equipped with a spreadsheet program Maruchipuran (Multiplan) and a text editor JS-WORD as well as the game Lode Runner.
Developer | NEC, ASCII, Cybernet Kogyo |
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Type | Home computer |
Release date | October 13, 1983; 40 years ago (1983-10-13)[1] |
Introductory price | Monochrome US$2,500 Color US$3,300 |
CPU | 8086 CPU @ 7 MHz |
Memory | 128 KB RAM (expandable to 768 KB RAM), 32 KB ROM |
Display | 14-inch color CRT (PC-KC651)(Rotatable monitor)[2] |
Graphics | 720 by 512 pixels (512 colors and can display 16) |
The development was operated by NEC Electronic Device Business Group, ASCII (Microsoft dealer in Japan) and Cybernet Kogyo, a subsidiary of Kyocera.[3]
Far ahead of its time and too costly, PC-100 did not sell well. A complete set with the printer PC-PR201 that could print alphabet, hiragana, katakana and kanji, came to nearly a million yen. For comparison, the Nintendo Family Computer released in July of the same year was only 14,800 yen and the vaunted Apple Lisa 2 sold for 2.2 million yen. The cheaper PC-9801F2 also by NEC outsold it.
- model10 (398,000 yen) - a 5-inch 2D (360 KB) floppy disk drive
- model20 (448,000 yen) - two 5-inch 2D floppy disk drives
- model30 (558,000 yen) - two 5-inch 2D floppy disk drives