Hardware
| Name Sort descending | Description |
|---|---|
| COSMO 700S | The COSMO 700III and 700S were announced in 1979. These computers used distributed processor architecture in which functions such as system control , arithmetic processing, input/output processing… |
| COSMO 800III | The COSMO 800III and 800S were announced in 1981. These were Mitsubishi Electric's high-performance computers -- designed with much more support for distributed processing, Japanese language… |
| COSMO 800S | The COSMO 800III and 800S were announced in 1981. These were Mitsubishi Electric's high-performance computers -- designed with much more support for distributed processing, Japanese language… |
| CR-03E (19 in 1) | The updated 19in 1 Card Reader CR03E is with much faster speed, support lots of the storage cards available on the market, compatiblewith Windows7/XP/Vista, Linux and Mac OS X, and Foxconn“Tool-… |
| CR-T02F (12 in 1) | Can be compatible with Windows7/XP/Vista, Linux and Mac OS X, Operating System.12 in 1 Card Reader.Internal, with 2 slots. |
| Cray 4 | The Cray-4 was intended to be Cray Computer Corporation's successor to the failed Cray-3 supercomputer. It was marketed to compete with the T90 from Cray Research. CCC went bankrupt in 1995 before… |
| Cray C90 | The Cray C90 series (initially named the Y-MP C90) was a vector processor supercomputer launched by Cray Research in 1991. The C90 was a development of the Cray Y-MP architecture. Compared to the… |
| Cray CS6400 | The Cray Superserver 6400, or CS6400, was a multiprocessor server computer system produced by Cray Research Superservers, Inc., a subsidiary of Cray Research, and launched in 1993. The CS6400 was… |
| Cray EL90 | The Cray EL90 series was an air-cooled vector processor supercomputer first sold by Cray Research in 1993. The EL90 series evolved from the Cray Y-MP EL minisupercomputer, and is compatible with Y… |
| Cray J90 | The Cray J90 series (code-named Jedi during development) was an air-cooled vector processor supercomputer first sold by Cray Research in 1994. The J90 evolved from the Cray Y-MP EL… |
| Cray MTA-2 | The Cray MTA-2 is a Shared-Memory MIMD computer marketed by Cray Inc. It is an unusual design based on the Tera computer designed by Tera Computer Company. The original Tera computer (also known… |
| Cray SV1 | The Cray SV1 is a vector processor supercomputer from the Cray Research division of Silicon Graphics introduced in 1998. The SV1 has since been succeeded by the Cray X1 and X1E vector… |
| Cray T90 | The Cray T90 series (code-named Triton during development) was the last of a line of vector processing supercomputers manufactured by Cray Research, Inc, superseding the Cray C90 series. The first… |
| Cray X-MP | The Cray X-MP was a supercomputer designed, built and sold by Cray Research. It was announced in 1982 as the "cleaned up" successor to the 1975 Cray-1, and was the world's fastest computer from… |
| Cray XE6 | The Cray XE6 scalable supercomputer is engineered to meet the demanding needs of capability-class High Performance Computing (HPC) applications. Each feature and function is selected to enable… |
| Cray XE6m | Introducing the next generation of affordable and productive massively parallel processing (MPP) computing – the Cray XE6m supercomputer. Building on the reliability and scalability of the Cray… |
| Cray XK6 | The Cray XK6 supercomputer is a trifecta of scalar, network and many-core innovation. It combines Cray’s proven Gemini interconnect, AMD's leading multi-core scalar processors and NVIDIA’s… |
| Cray XMS | The Cray XMS was a vector processor minisupercomputer sold by Cray Research from 1990 to 1991. The XMS was originally designed by Supertek Computers Inc. as the Supertek S-1, intended to be a low-… |
| Cray XMT | The Cray XMT supercomputing system is a scalable massively multithreaded platform with a shared memory architecture for large-scale data analysis and data mining. The system is purpose-built for… |
| Cray XT3 | The Cray XT3 is a distributed memory massively parallel MIMD supercomputer designed by Cray Inc. with Sandia National Laboratories under the codename Red Storm. Cray turned the design into a… |
| Cray XT4 | The Cray XT4 (codenamed Hood during development) is an updated version of the Cray XT3 supercomputer. It was released on November 18, 2006. It includes an updated version of the SeaStar… |
| Cray XT5 (Jaguar) | Jaguar is a petascale supercomputer built by Cray at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. The massively parallel Jaguar has a peak performance of just over 1,750 teraflops… |
| Cray XT6 | The Cray XT6 is an updated version of the Cray XT5 supercomputer, launched on 16 November 2009. The dual- or quad-core AMD Opteron 2000-series processors of the XT5 are replaced in the XT6 with… |
| Cray Y-MP | The Cray Y-MP was a supercomputer sold by Cray Research from 1988, and the successor to the company's X-MP. The Y-MP retained software compatibility with the X-MP, but extended the address… |
| Cray-1 | The Cray-1 was a supercomputer designed, manufactured, and marketed by Cray Research. The first Cray-1 system was installed at Los Alamos National Laboratory in 1976, and it went on to become one… |
| Cray-2 | The Cray-2 was a four-processor ECL vector supercomputer made by Cray Research starting in 1985. It was the fastest machine in the world when it was released, replacing the Cray Research X-MP… |
| Cray-3 | The Cray-3 was a vector supercomputer intended to be Cray Research's successor to the Cray-2. The system was to be the first major application of gallium arsenide (GaAs) semiconductors in… |
| Creative Technology CUBIC 99 | This computer, also known as the Talking Computer, was fully compatible with the Apple II and the CP/M operating systems thanks to its dual processor motherboard (6502 and Z80). It was… |
| Creatronic Bi Bip 4 | Creatronic Bi Bip 4 is a home video game console made by Creatronic in 1977. The console has 4 games and AY-3-8500 chip. |
| Creatronic Bi.Bip 100 | Creatronic Bi.Bip 100 is a pong console made by Creatronic back in 1977. |
| Creatronic Bi.Bip 6 | Creatronic Bi.Bip 6 is a pong console made by Creatronic in 1978. The console has 6 games and a light gun. |
| Creatronic Bi.Bip 8 | Creatronic Bi.Bip 8 is a console made by Creatronic back in 1977. It has 8 games and uses the AY-3-8600 chip. |
| Creatronic Program 2000 | Creatronic Program 2000 is a console marketed by Creatronic back in 1978. |
| CRF01F (19 in 1) | Can be compatible with Windows7/XP/Vista, Linux and Mac OS X,Operating System.Internal, with 4 slots.19 in 1 Card Reader. |
| Cromemco C-10 | The C-10 is Cromemco's only attempt to step in the market of personal and family oriented computers.The goal was to compete with Apple II's and IBM PC's in small businesses as they started getting… |
| Cromemco SCC | The Cromemco Single Card Computer(SCC)is a Z80A based,S-100 bus microcomputer subsystem.The SCC is self-contained,excepting external power,making it an ideal choice for small to medium scale… |
| Cromemco System CS100 | The CS-100 system is an 8-slot, desk-top system. It can be expanded to 4M bytes of RAM memory. A number of standard configurations are available (see back page) for your choice of RAM capacity,… |
| Cromemco System CS300 | The CS-300 system provides 20 card slots for even greater extension of capabilities. Standard configurations can be selected that offer 512K bytes to 2M bytes of RAM, with or without error-… |
| Cromemco System CS400 | Cromemco System CS400. |
| Cromemco System One | The Cromemco System One is quite a bit smaller than the huge System Three, but it's built just as hefty, and includes a hard drive. The S-100 bus cards are mounted horizontally in a steel box… |
| Cromemco System Three | The System Three consists of a fast, powerful, Z80-based microcomputer with capability for enormous RAM memory expansion and with provision for up to four floppy disk drives. |
| Cromemco System Zero | The System 0 was one of the last and lowest cost system from Cromemco.The basic unit was a six-slot S-100 board with an all-in-one CPU board and power supply. The smallest system featured 1 KB RAM… |
| Cromemco Z-1 | The Cromemco Z-1 uses an IMSAI chassis, with 22 card slots and a 28 amperes (about 300 watts) power supply. The major innovation of the Z-1 is the use of the 4 Mhz version of the Z-80 processor.… |
| Cromemco Z-2 | Z-2 was the name of a series of microcomputer made by Cromemco, Inc. which were produced in the middle to late 1970s. |
| Cruz PS47 | A compact, affordable tablet that�s packed with features. Inside the 7� Cruz PS47�s slim design are specs enough to go head to head with much more expensive tablets and readers, all while… |
| Cruz R100 | The world’s first affordable touch screen color ereader. Cruz through books, magazines, and newspapers on this revolutionary device’s crystal clear 7” display. Plays video, music, and browses the… |
| Cruz t103 | A remarkably affordable, remarkably feature rich tablet. Packed inside the Cruz Tablet’s smart, refined design are specs and features enough to go head to head with any other tablet PC on the… |
| Cruz t301 | The Velocity Micro Cruz T103 4GB 7" Android Tablet has several good features that make it a wonderfully useful electronic device. This touch screen entertainment tablet has a built-in Kindle… |
| Cruz t408 | A larger screen without the price tag, the 8” Velocity Micro Cruz T408 is perfect for multimedia lovers and fans of Android in search of a more robust experience without sacrificing mobility.… |
| Cruz t410 | The Velocity Micro Cruz T410 tablet has a 10 inch, 1024 x 600 pixel capacitive touchscreen display. The tablet has a 1 GHz single core ARM Cortex-A8 processor designed by Samsung. It’s similar to… |
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