MicroBee

MicroBee (or Micro Bee) was a series of networkable home computers by Applied Technology, which became publicly listed company MicroBee Systems Limited soon after its release. The original Microbee computer was designed in Australia by a team including Owen Hill and Matthew Starr.

MicroBee
DeveloperApplied Technology
TypeHome computers
Release dateFebruary 1982 (1982-02)
Introductory priceA$399 in Kit Form
Discontinued1990 (1990)
Operating systemMicroWorld BASIC
DGOS (David Griffiths Operating System)
CPUZilog Z80 @ 2 MHz
Memory16 kB or 32 kB
GraphicsSynertek 6545 CRT controller for 64 × 16 characters (512 × 256 pixels)
SoundMonotonic sound generator & speaker, 2 octaves

The MicroBee's most distinctive features are its user configurable video display (capable of mimicking the displays of other computers and devices including the TRS-80, Sorcerer and SOL20 with later colour and graphic models 40 and 80 column terminals, Super-80, ZX Spectrum, early arcade machines, Amstrad CPC 464) and its battery backed non-volatile RAM and small size allowing it to be powered off, transported, and powered back on and resume activities on the currently loaded program or document.

It was originally packaged as a two board unit with the lower "baseboard" containing all components except the system memory which was mounted on the upper "core board".

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