video games gallery from the last century

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V X Y Z
Cameos
CamputersLynx
CanonComputer
CanonMSX
Casio
CasioCassiopeia
CasioMSX
CasioPocket
CasioPV1000
CCE
CeTecMSX
CGL
CheetahMarketin
ColecoAdam
Colecovision
Commodore
CommodoreAmiga
CommodoreCBMII
CommodorePC
CommodorePET
CommodoreVIC
CommodoreMaxMac
CompaqPC
CompaqiPaq
Comx
Cromemco
Cybiko
Czerweny


Canon-Computer

    Computers:4 ( :1 )    Art


Canon Cat

1987


Canon Cat is a task-dedicated desktop computer released by Canon Inc. in 1987 at the price of U.S. $1,495. On the surface, it was not unlike dedicated word processors popular in the late 1970s to early 1980s, but it was far more powerful, and incorporated many unique ideas for data manipulation.

Canon Cat is primarily the creation of Jef Raskin, the originator of the Macintosh project at Apple. After leaving the company in 1982 and founding Information Appliance, Inc., he began designing a new computer closer to his original vision of an inexpensive, utilitarian peoples computer. Information Appliance developed the Swyft computer prototype, and then developed and licensed it to Canon as the Cat. BYTE in 1987 described the Cat as a spiritual heir to the Macintosh.

It features a text user interface, not making use of any pointer (mouse), icons, or graphics. All data are seen as a long stream of text broken into several pages. Instead of using a traditional command line interface or menu system, the Cat makes use of its special keyboard, with commands being activated by holding down a Use Front key and pressing another key. The Cat also uses special Leap keys, which, when held down, allows the user to incrementally search for strings of characters.

The machines hardware consists of a 9-inch (229 mm) black-and-white monitor (80 x 24 character display, 672 x 344 resolution), a single 3½-inch 256 KB floppy disk drive, and an IBM Selectric–compatible keyboard. It uses a Motorola 68000 CPU (like the Macintosh, Lisa, Atari ST, and Amiga) running at 5 MHz, has 256 KB of RAM, and an internal 300/1200 bit/s modem. Setup and user preference data are stored in 8 KB of non-volatile (battery backed-up) RAM. The Cats array of I/O interfaces encompasses one Centronics parallel port, one RS-232C serial port (DB-25), and two RJ11 telephone jacks for the modem loop. The total weight of the system is 17 pounds (7.7 kg).

An extensive range of application software is built into 256 KB of ROM: standard office suite programs, communications, a 90,000-word spelling dictionary, and user programming toolchains for Forth and assembly language.

A text-only machine, the Cat includes graphics routines in ROM as well as connectors for a mouse or other pointing device that are never used.

There is a defunct software project called Archy, initiated by Raskin, to develop a similar yet even more capable system for current computing systems. The project was designed to eventually replace current software user interfaces.


Instead of the mouse, the computer has two suction buttons below the spacebar to jump the cursor

Canon Notejet

1993


Combo Notebook and Printer

Canon Object Station


Los Canon object.station son una línea de estaciones de trabajo basadas en procesadores Intel y con sistema operativo NEXTSTEP desarrolladas por Canon Inc. y comercializadas en 1994 y 1995.

Canon era uno de los mayores accionistas de NeXT (además había fabricado las impresoras de la gama y el disco magneto-óptico del NeXTcube). Al abandonar NeXT el hardware en 1993, decide comprar esa línea de negocio y lanzar su propia línea de estaciones sucesoras de las míticas NeXTstation. A diferencias de estas, basadas en microprocesadores Motorola, Canon opta por el Intel 80486 y el Intel Pentium y usa una arquitectura PC, pero optimizada para NEXTSTEP.


 Manufacturer: Canon
Model: Object.Station 41
CPU: Intel 486DX4@100MHz
RAM: 16 MB (up to 96 MB)
Resolution: max. 1280×1024
Color: 16 bit
Interface: Fast-SCSI-2, Ethernet, parallel, 2 * serial, keyboard, mouse, video, microphone, headphone, stereo out
Drives: 500 MB HDD, CD-ROM, 3.5″ floppy disk drive
OS: NEXSTEP, Openstep, Windows NT
Released in: 1994
Initial price: $5000

Canon X-07

1983


 Lenguajes Microsoft Basic
Teclado QWERTY / AZERTY, 60 chicklet Teclas, 5 function Teclas, arrow Teclas and a sort of numeric keypad (mapped on the letters)
CPU National Semiconductor NSC 800 (CMOS Tecnología, Z80 compatible)
RAM 8 KB (6748 bytes free for Basic)
ROM 20 KB
Modos de Texto 4 x 20
Modo gráfico 120 x 32
Colores monochrome LCD Pantalla
Sonido Yes, beeper
Tamaño/Peso 20 x 13 x 2,6 cm / 480 gr
Puertos de entrada/salida Parallel port, Expansion port,Tape recorder, Serial port, Cart slots, card slot
Almacenamiento interno RAM-cards
Fuente de alimentación External PSU (4.5v - 450 mA) or 4 Pilas cells
Precio 610 (France, september 83)
457 (France, november 83)
335 (France, march 84)