Sharp PC-1350
The Sharp PC-1350 is a small pocket computer manufactured by Sharp. The PC-1350 was introduced in 1984 and was used by engineers, and favored by programmers for its programming and graphical capabilities. It was superseded in 1987 by the PC-1360, which featured one additional RAM expansion port, improved BASIC, floppy disk capability, and a faster CPU.

Sharp PC-1350
Technical specifications
    
Listed below are the technical specification of the PC-1350 and PC-1360 models.[1][2][3]
- CMOS 8-bit CPU SC61860 at 768 kHz
 - 24x4 character (150x32 pixels) LCD controlled by SC43537 display LSI chip
 - 4 KiB RAM on 2x HM6116 chip
 - 40 KiB System ROM (8 KiB CPU internal, 32 KiB external on SC613256 chip)
 - Integrated piezo speaker (beep only)
 - I/O Sharp custom interfaces for printers and tape recorders
 - I/O RS-232 at TTL level
 - Powered by two CR-2032 lithium batteries (consumption max. 5 mA during arithmetical computing, 20 uA during poweroff)
 - Built-in BASIC interpreter
 - RAM expansion port, for up to 20 KiB of RAM in total.
 
See also
    
    
References
    
- "sharp pc-1350". Voidware Calculator Museum. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
 - "Sharp PC-1360 - Computing History". Centre for Computing History. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
 - "PC-1350". Pocket Computer Museum. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
 
External links
    
    
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.