Thomson TO8

1986 French computer model From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Thomson TO8

The Thomson TO8 is a home computer introduced by French company Thomson SA in 1986, with a cost of 2,990 FF.[1][2][3] It replaces its predecessor, the Thomson TO7/70, while remaining essentially compatible.[4][3]

Quick Facts Manufacturer, Release date ...
Thumb
Thomson TO8D
ManufacturerThomson SA
Release date1986; 39 years ago (1986)
Introductory price2,990 FF
Discontinued1989; 36 years ago (1989)
Operating systemBasic 512, Basic 1.0 and Disk Basic
CPUMotorola 6809E, 1 MHz
Memory256 KB (512 KB max.) RAM
80 KB ROM
StorageDisk drive, tape (optional)
Display160 x 200 (16 or 5 colors)
320 x 200 (2, 3, 4 or 16 colors)
640 x 200 (2 colors)
GraphicsThomson EF9369
Soundgenerator + 1 bit D/A converter 6 bits
Input81 keys AZERTY keyboard, light pen
Controller inputjoystick, mouse
Backward
compatibility
Thomson TO7/70
PredecessorThomson TO7/70
SuccessorThomson TO9+
Close

The new features of the TO8, like larger memory (256KB) and better graphics modes (powered by the Thomson EF9369 graphics chip), are shared with the other third generation Thomson computers (MO6 and TO9+).[5][6][7][8]

The TO8 has a tape drive and Microsoft BASIC 1.0 (in standard and 512 KB versions)[9] on its internal ROM, and there is an optional external floppy drive. Graphics were provided by the Thomson EF9369 chip, allowing the display of 16 colors from a palette of 4096.[7][8]

More than 120 games exist for the system.[10][11]

An improved version, the Thomson TO8D, includes a built-in 3.5" floppy drive.

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.