Sharp PC-1211
The Sharp PC-1211 is a pocket computer marketed by Sharp Corporation in the 1980s. The computer was powered by two 4-bit CPUs laid out in power-saving CMOS circuitry. One acted as the main CPU, the other dealt with the input/output and display interface. Users could write computer programs in BASIC.
Sharp PC-1211 | |
Also known as | Lesa |
---|---|
Manufacturer | Sharp Corporation |
Generation | First |
Release date | 1980 | 's
CPU | SC43177/SC43178 processors at 256 kHz |
Memory | three TC5514P 4 Kbit RAM modules |
Display | 24 digit dot matrix LCD |
Input | Full QWERTY-style keyboard |
Power | four MR44 1.35 V Mercury button cells |
Successor | Sharp PC-5000 |
Related | Sharp PC-1500 Sharp PC-1251 |
A badge-engineered version of the PC-1211 was marketed by Radio Shack as the first iteration of the TRS-80 Pocket Computer with just a marginally different look (outer plastic parts in black, not brown, gray display frame)
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