- PMD 85
The PMD 85 was a
personal computer produced from 1985 by the companies TeslaPiešťany and Bratislava in the formerCzechoslovakia .They were deployed "en masse" in schools throughout
Slovakia , while theIQ 151 performed a similar role in Czech part of the country.PMD 85s were famous for their overheating problems, and were jokingly referred to as "
coffee machine s".This computer was produced locally due to a lack of foreign
currency with which to buy systems from the WestFact|date=May 2007. After the fall of socialism in1989 , production of the PMD 85 was stopped. PMD 85 was not competitive in quality or features compared to foreign PCs available at that time.Specifications
*
MHB 8080A 2.048MHz CPU
* 48 KB RAM
* 4 KB ROM
*System monitor
*Tape utilities
*TV output
* 288×256 resolution
* 4 levels ofgrayscale orcolour s, changeable in 6 pixel wide stripes
*tape recorder interface
* ROM module interface. A ROM module with theBASIC programming language was a standard part of the computer, but there were more ROM modules designed and produced, containing Pascal, LOGO and more.Variants
* The PMD 85, first version, produced by Tesla Piešťany, was originally in a
white -coloured case and later in some other colours. It was more of a prototype and is quite rare today.
* The PMD 85, second version, produced by Tesla Bratislava, was known as "the" PMD 85, and sometimes labeled as PMD 85-1. It was made with a darkgray case, and was famous for its keyboards with extremely tough keys.
* The PMD 85-2 introduced some improvements in BASIC, some in input routines (for instance, key autorepeat), and a much more ergonomic keyboard (but much less mechanically reliable). Some of the changes caused it to be not completelybackward compatible .
* The PMD 85-2A used different hardware, leading to less overheating of the memory chips, an additional 8 KB RAM and more memory for BASIC, but was otherwise compatible with PMD 85-2.
* The PMD 85-2B had 64 KB memory modules instead of 16 KB
* The PMD 85-3 added colour TV output – former versions had colour output only when used with a monitor – and some more hardware changes, including mapping all the address space into RAM, which meant it could be made almost 100% compatible with previous models by loading their ROM in appropriate memory locations.Character encoding included all Czech and Slovak characters, and aCyrillic version was also produced.The PMD 85-2 was an inspiration for the
MAŤO personal computer, also sold as aself-assembly kit . It had different hardware and very limited compatibility with PMD; its BASIC, memory structure and I/O were almost, but not completely the same, but tape format was different. It was intended as a home computer, but never really caught on.Later, the
Didaktik Alfa and Beta were produced as more reliable clones.ee also
*
MAŤO External links
* [http://pmd85.djb-studios.com/ The most modern emulator by Roman Bórik & Martin Bórik - RM-TEAM]
* [http://www.schotek.cz/pmd/ DJ Martin Schotek's page]
* [http://pmd85.topindex.sk/ PMD-85-1 Hardware emulator with TV out]
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