Elektronika 60
Soviet micro-computer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Elektronika 60 (Russian: Электроника 60) is a computer made in the Soviet Union by Elektronika in Voronezh from 1978 until 1991. It is a rack-mounted system with no built-in display or storage devices. It was usually paired with a 15IE-00-013 terminal and I/O devices. The main logic unit is located on the M2 CPU board. As an unlicensed clone implementation of the DEC PDP-11/23, the Elektronika 60 is generally software-compatible, could use much of the same peripherals, and physically resembles that model.
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Elektronika 60M | |
Developer | Elektronika |
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Type | Minicomputer |
Release date | 1978 |
Discontinued | 1991 |
Operating system | RT-11 and other |
CPU | M2 (Soviet LSI-11--PDP-11 LSI CPU implementation--clone) |
Memory | 4kb 16-bit words; max 32k 16-bit words |
The original implementation of Tetris was written for the Elektronika 60 by Alexey Pajitnov in 1985.[1] As the Elektronika 60 does not have raster graphics, text characters were used to form the blocks.[2]
Technical specifications
M2 CPU:
References
External links
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