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  2. Organ console - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organ_console

    The manuals, from the bottom to top are: Choir, Great, Swell, and Solo/Echo. The organ is played with at least one keyboard, with configurations featuring from two to five keyboards being the most common. [2] A keyboard to be played by the hands is called a manual (from the Latin manus, "hand"); an organ with four keyboards is said to have four ...

  3. MPC 1600 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MPC_1600

    The Multi-Personal Computer (MPC), better known as the MPC 1600, is a line of desktop personal computers released by Columbia Data Products (CDP) starting in 1982. The original MPC, released in June 1982, was the first commercially released computer system that was fully compatible with the IBM Personal Computer (IBM PC).

  4. Electric organ - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_organ

    This feature, combined with the three-keyboard layout (i.e., manuals and pedalboard), the freedom of electrical power, and a wide, easily controllable range of volume, made the first electronic organs more flexible than any reed organ, or indeed any previous musical instrument except, perhaps, the pipe organ itself.

  5. Multiseat configuration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiseat_configuration

    A "seat" consists of all hardware devices assigned to a specific workplace at which one user sits at and interacts with the computer. It consists of at least one graphics device (graphics card or just an output (e.g. HDMI/VGA/DisplayPort port) and the attached monitor/video projector) for the output and a keyboard and a mouse for the input. It ...

  6. KIM-1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KIM-1

    The KIM-1, short for Keyboard Input Monitor, is a small 6502-based single-board computer developed and produced by MOS Technology, Inc. and launched in 1976. It was very successful in that period, due to its low price (thanks to the inexpensive 6502 microprocessor) and easy-access expandability.

  7. KC 85 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KC_85

    The KC 85 used a separate keyboard driven by a remote control IC. The KC 85/2 was the first computer made in Mühlhausen and had only font ROMs for capital letters, and no BASIC in ROM. Later, the KC 85/3 was introduced and this one had a KC-BASIC [de] interpreter in ROM , freeing the user from having to load it from a cassette every time.

  8. Manual (music) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manual_(music)

    The word "manual" is used instead of the word "keyboard" when referring to any hand-operated keyboard on a keyboard instrument that has a pedalboard (a keyboard on which notes are played with the feet), such as an organ; or when referring to one of the keyboards on an instrument that has more than one hand-operated keyboard, such as a two- or ...

  9. VDM-1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VDM-1

    The system went on sale soon after at a price of $199 for the kit version. As reviews of the era noted, an Altair compatible machine equipped with a keyboard, the VDM-1, and an appropriate monitor (from Radio Shack) cost less than a typical smart terminal of the era. [10]

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