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  2. MCJ (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MCJ_(company)

    MCJ Co., Ltd. is a Japanese company active in the personal computer, entertainment, information and communication industries. [1] MCJ itself is a holding company, responsible for the management of the group companies. [2]

  3. Iiyama (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iiyama_(company)

    Iiyama was founded in 1972 by Kazuro Katsuyama, named after the city of Iiyama in Nagano Prefecture, Japan. The company was bought in January 2006 by MCJ Corporation, which includes Mouse Computer Corporation. The headquarters of iiyama was moved to Europe in October 2008.

  4. List of computer hardware manufacturers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_computer_hardware...

    There are a number of other companies (AMD, Microchip, Altera, etc.) making specialized chipsets as part of other ICs, and they are not often found in PC hardware (laptop, desktop or server). There are also a number of now defunct companies (like 3com, DEC, SGI) that produced network related chipsets for us in general computers.

  5. BIOS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BIOS

    Award BIOS setup utility on a standard PC. A modern BIOS setup utility has a text user interface (TUI) or graphical user interface (GUI) accessed by pressing a certain key on the keyboard when the PC starts. Usually, the key is advertised for short time during the early startup, for example "Press DEL to enter Setup".

  6. Bus mouse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bus_mouse

    When the IBM PS/2 was introduced, it included a motherboard mouse interface which was integrated with the keyboard controller (still called the PS/2 mouse interface long after the PS/2 brand was withdrawn); this fairly quickly drove the bus mouse design out of the marketplace. The bus mouse lived on in the NEC PC-98 family of personal computers ...

  7. PC-8800 series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PC-8800_series

    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 ...

  8. PC-98 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PC-98

    The PC-9800 series [3], commonly shortened to PC-98 or simply 98 (キューハチ, Kyū-hachi), [4] is a lineup of Japanese 16-bit and 32-bit personal computers manufactured by NEC from 1982 to 2003. [1]

  9. Japanese input method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_input_method

    Sometimes, each mode (Roman and Japanese) may even have its own key, in order to prevent ambiguity when the user is typing quickly. There may also be a key to instruct the computer to convert the latest hiragana characters into kanji, although usually the space key serves the same purpose since Japanese writing doesn't use spaces.