- Franklin Electronic Publishers
Franklin Electronic Publishers (formerly Franklin Computer Corporation) is an American
consumer electronics manufacturer based in Burlington,New Jersey , founded in1981 . Since the mid-1980s it has primarily created and sold hand-held electronic references, such as spelling correctors, dictionaries, translation devices, medical references and Bibles. It is publicly traded on theAmerican Stock Exchange under the symbol FEP.In the past, it also made the Rex line of
personal digital assistant s, such as theREX 5000 . That product line was later sold toXircom .Early history
Franklin was originally named Franklin Computer Corporation. It was a manufacturer of clones of the
Apple II series computer, which it first marketed in 1982.In early 1982, Franklin released the
Franklin Ace 100 , and in March of the same year, theFranklin Ace 1000 ; they were very close copies of the Apple II and II+ computers, respectively. Themotherboard design is nearly identical and Franklin also copied Apple's ROMs. Two months later,Apple Computer sued Franklin forcopyright violation. Franklin initially won. (See "Apple Computer, Inc. v. Franklin Computer Corp. ".)Franklin followed with the Ace 1200, which included two built-in 5¼" floppy drives and a
Zilog Z80 processor forCP/M compatibility—a popular third-party option for the Apple II.In August 1983, a court ruled against Franklin, which had argued that because computer code generally did not exist in printed form, it could not be copyrighted. Franklin freely admitted it had copied Apple's ROM and operating system code. However, Franklin was able to get an injunction that allowed it to continue marketing its computers. This case had lasting implications, setting precedent for copyright and
reverse engineering . The case was still frequently cited more than 20 years after the August 1983 ruling.Starting in October 1985, Franklin released a second-generation line of Apple II clones, compatible with the Apple IIe and IIc, including the Ace 2000 and Ace 500. Most added more memory and a numeric keypad in addition to undercutting Apple's price. Franklin's last Apple II clone, the Ace 2200, sported a detached keyboard and dual internal 5.25-inch
floppy disk drives. It was released in the 1987–1988 time frame.Franklin also released a pair of
IBM PC compatible computers, the Franklin PC6000 and PC8000, during 1986–1988. Both were based on theIntel 8088 running at 4.77 MHz. The PC6000 had 512K of RAM and a single floppy drive, while the PC8000 had 640K and dual drives. These matched the most common configurations of the time.Soon after the Ace 2200's release, Apple was able to force Franklin out of the desktop computer market entirely, including its IBM-compatible PCs. As a result, the only Apple-compatible computer that remained on the market was
VTech 'sLaser 128 .With the loss of its desktop computer business, Franklin concentrated on its handheld line, which it had introduced in 1986.
External links
* [http://www.franklin.com Franklin official home page]
* [http://www.apple2clones.com/?q=article/franklin+remembered Franklin Remembered, a series of articles at apple2clones.com]
* [http://www.folklore.org/StoryView.py?project=Macintosh&story=Stolen_From_Apple.txt After the Franklin affair, Apple added a backdoor into their ROMs so that stolen Apple code could be detected]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.