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PC-9801 PC-9801F motherboard. The first model, the PC-9801, launched in October 1982, [14] and employs an 8086 CPU. It runs at a clock speed of 5 MHz, with two μPD7220 display controllers (one for text, the other for video graphics), and was shipped with 128 KB of RAM that can be expanded to 640 KB. Its 8-color display has a maximum resolution ...
PC-UX was a discontinued NEC port of UNIX System III [1] for their APC III [2] and PC-9801 personal computer. PC-UX possessed extensive graphics capabilities at the time of its release. PC-UX and MS-DOS could reside on the same hard drive, with PC-UX containing transfer utilities that allowed for file transfers to MS-DOS.
The PC-8801 was a Japanese home computer released by NEC in 1981 - and original PC-8801 games (as opposed to titles from later revisions of the platform) started to be made available through Project EGG on November 24, 2001. There have been 184 original PC-8801 titles available on Project EGG, 25 of which are no longer available for purchase:
The Japanese NEC Corporation produced several personal computers, including the NEC PC-6001, NEC PC-8801 and NEC PC-9801. Subcategories This category has the following 7 subcategories, out of 7 total.
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By November 1983, the PC-8801 had shipped 170,000 units. [7] The PC-8801's direct successor, the PC-8801mkII, came with a JIS level 1 kanji font ROM, a smaller case and keyboard, and, in the models 20 and 30, one or two internal 5 1 ⁄ 4-inch 2D floppy disk drives. This set of PC-8800 computers sold more units than the PC-9800 series at that ...
Rance 4.1: O-Kusuri Kōjō o Sukue! December 1, 1995: Alice Soft: Alice Soft Rance 4.2: Angel-gumi: December 8, 1995: Alice Soft: Alice Soft Rance: Hikari o Motomete: July 15, 1989: Alice Soft: Alice Soft Rance II: Hangyaku no Shōjotachi: May 15, 1990: Alice Soft: Alice Soft Rance III: Leazas Kanraku: 1991: Alice Soft: Alice Soft Rance IV ...
The YMF288, [2] a.k.a. OPN3, is a later development of the YM2608, used in later NEC PC-9801 computer sound cards. It removes the YM2608's GPIO ports, CSM (Composite sine mode) and the ADPCM Sound Source. It also reduces the wait times on register access, and adds a low-power standby mode.