Hardware

Name Sort descending Description
Sony PlayStation 2

The PlayStation 2 (PS2) is a home video game console developed and marketed by Sony Computer Entertainment. It was first released in Japan on March 4, 2000, in North America on October 26, 2000,…

Sony PocketStation

The PocketStation is a Memory Card peripheral by Sony Computer Entertainment for the PlayStation home video game console. Categorized by Sony as a combination of a Memory Card and a miniature…

Sony PS One

The PS One (officially stylized as PS one and alternatively spelled PSOne and PSone) is a smaller, redesigned version of the original PlayStation platform. (Dimensions are 38 mm × 193 mm × 144 mm…

Sony Series 35 Model 10

This computer is a Wordprocessor system which looks like an Apple Macintosh (but is not a Macintosh compatible).

Sony SMC 70

The SMC 70 was, like its successor, the SMC 70G designed for professional video applications. It was the first computer in the world to use 3.5" floppy disk, created a little earlier by Sony.

Sony SMC 70G

The SMC 70G was designed for professional video applications. With its genlock, it was possible to mix picture from the computer and pictures from a videodisc or any other video source.

Sony SMC-777

This computer is the successor of the SMC 70. It is also capable of superimposition.

Sord M-100ACE

The Sord M-100ACE was the professional version of the M-170, offering as standard a floppy disc controller card, a single or dual 5" 143 KB floppy disc unit and a colour graphic video card.

Sord M-170

The M-170 computer was originaly sold as a home computer but, as it was a very reliable system, many companies used it as a small business system. It was derived from the M-100, M-110 home systems…

Sord M223

Two models were launched: the Sord MK II 203 and Sord MK II 223. The difference is that the 223 has 3 x S100 slots for easy expansion. Both have a special DMA channel for the disks (floppy and…

Sord M23 Mark III

Despite the M23 featured a cartridge port, all of its important software came on floppies, including the ground-breaking PIPS-III and several BASIC compiler variants developed by Sord and running…

SORD M5

The Sord M5 is a home computer launched by Sord Computer Corporation in 1982. Primarily the Sord M5 competed in the Japanese home computer market, though was also sold as the CGL M5 in the United…

SORD M68

The SORD M68 has two buses: a 16-bit bus (with 3 slots) and a 8-bit bus (the S100 bus with two slots). Two models: The M68 Mark IV with two 5.25" floppy disk drives (1.2 Mb each) and the M68 Mark…

Soundic Programmable TV-Game SD-050

Soundic Programmable TV-Game SD-050, manufactured in Hong Kong in 1978, came to Spain under the name of Programmable TV-Game. This equipment worked as a control table from where the information in…

Soundic SD-04 TV Sports B&W

Soundic SD-04 TV Sports B&W is a black and white version of the SD-04. Aside from being in colour it also uses the AY-3-8600 chip instead of AY-3-8610, meaning it misses the two target…

Soundic SD-04 TV Sports colour

Soundic SD-04 TV Sports colour was a pong console with 10 games: 8 Pong + 2 rifle. It uses the AY-3-8610 chip.

Soundic SD-05

Soundic SD-05 was a PC-50x series pong console released in 1978.

Soundic SD-050S

Soundic SD-050S was a pong console released in 1978.

Soundic SD-061

Soundic SD-061 was released in Hong Kong 1978. The SOUNDIC SD-061 has got 10 sport games: Squash, Basketball, Tennis, Practice, Basketball Practice, Target Single, Target Twin, Gridball, Soccer…

Soundic SD-062 TV-18

SD-062 TV-18 is a dedicated console that features 14 game modes. The console combines the AY-3-8610 and AY-3-8760 chips to provide the following games: Squash, Practice, Basketball, Basketball…

Soundic SD-070C Sport

Soundic SD-070C Sport was one of the PC-50x series console.

Soundic SD-090

Soundic SD 090 Programmable game. Year:1978.. Display: with color. First generation PC-50x series console

Soundic SD-290

Though different in shape, the Soundic SD-290 is internally the same system as the Rollet Video-Color, the Hanimex HMG-7900 and the Soundicvision SD-200. This SD-290 model was sold worldwide…

Soundic Tank Battle SD-023C

Tank Battle: Model - SD-023C is a dedicated console playing a tank battle game for two players. The console uses the General Instruments AY-3-8700 dedicated chip. Tanks are shown in a top down…

Soundic TV Sport

Soundic TV Sport was a pong console released in 1977.

Soundic TVG SD-01

Soundic TVG SD-01 is a dedicated console that looks like the TV Scoreboard: 2&4 Player Plus Target at first glance, but uses the more common AY-3-8500 dedicated pong chip instead. Otherwise it…

Soundic Victory MPT-02

The Soundic Victory MPT-02 is a clone of one of the first home videogame systems, the RCA Studio II.

In opposition to the Studio II, the Victory MPT-02 has detachable controllers. Those…

Soundic Video Raceway

The Soundic Video Raceway is a dedicated console playing two top down racing games and four side view motocross games. The console uses the AY-3-8760 and AY-3-8603 dedicated chips. There are two…

Soundicvision SD-200

Soundicvision SD-200 is a low-range console with rather simplistic games. It was released around 1983. It is one of those cheap systems produced in Asia for people not able to buy the more…

SP891

BenQ SP891 Full HD high brightness projector offers high brightness projection with Full HD image quality. The higher the resolution, the better the image quality. Full HD resolution will give you…

Spacewar!

Spacewar! is a space combat video game developed in 1962 by Steve Russell in collaboration with Martin Graetz, Wayne Wiitanen, Bob Saunders, Steve Piner, and others. It was written for the newly…

SPARC LT AS1000

Marketed by Toshiba in 1990, this was the world's first laptop UNIX workstation equipped with a RISC MPU.
The SunOS from Sun Microsystems (U.S.) was used as the OS, and the system achieved…

Spectravideo SVI 728

The SVI-728 was the first home computer from Spectravideo that complied fully with the MSX home computer specification. It was introduced in 1985. The design is virtually identical to that of the…

Sphere I

The Sphere I was a personal computer completed in 1975 by Michael Donald Wise of Sphere Corporation, of Bountiful, Utah. The Sphere I featured a Motorola 6800 CPU, onboard ROM, Monitor, 4 KB of…

SR2001

Hitachi announced the SR2001 supercomputer, its first parallel computer, in June 1994. The SR2001 achieved a maximum speed of 23 gigaFLOPS with between eight and 128 RISC chips connected with a 3D…

SR8000

Hitachi announced the SR8000 supercomputer in May 1998. The SR8000 featured Hitachi’s own RISC microprocessors developed with 0.25-micron CMOS technology and a multidimensional crossbar network…

SS PERFORMANCE PC H61

Intel H61 Express Chipset, 2 GB DDR3 RAM upgradeable to 8 GB, Very Large, Standard 320 GB SATA II HDD, Gigabit LAN, The MNC Killer - Mac Look Alike AIO, India's FIRST Desktop Class ALL-IN-ONE with…

Stagecoach

Harness the Power of up to 7 Overo COMs Networked Together on a Stagecoach Expansion Board.

StrongARM

The StrongARM is a family of microprocessors that implemented the ARM V4 instruction set architecture (ISA). It was developed by Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) and later sold to Intel, who…

Studio and Studio Slim

Using the same case style as Dell's Inspiron 530 and 530s desktops but with a black color, the Studio and Studio Slim desktops are targeted towards consumers looking for a multimedia entertainment…

Studio Hybrid

A miniature desktop similar to the HP Pavilion Slimline series of desktops and Apple's Mac Mini. It is Dell's most energy-efficient desktop. The desktop is named Studio Hybrid because it uses…

Studio One 1909

Released in the USA on April 28, 2009, the Studio One 19 is a 19 inch all-in-one desktop computer. It is a lower-end alternative to Dell's XPS One 20 and 24. The chassis design highly resembles…

Studio XPS

The Studio XPS, also referred to as Studio XPS 435MT, was released November 16, 2008. This is a PC with performance somewhat between the XPS 420 and 630. Its processor is the Intel Core i7. The…

Studio XPS 13

A 13.3" laptop that offers a Studio-XPS crossover. Runs on DDR3 memory and uses Intel Core 2 Duo processors.When launched, the Studio XPS 13 was widely acclaimed as a the ultimate notebook,…

Studio XPS 13 (M1340)

Similar to the Studio XPS 16 but trimmed down into a 13.3-inch 720p 16:10 aspect ratio screen, it has an illuminated QWERTY keyboard and includes leather accents on the lid. Its full body is piano…

Studio XPS 16

A larger version of the Studio XPS 13 (16"). It offers an optional Blu-Ray optical drive, and has an RGBLED 1080p full HD display (1920×1080p) which was widely considered the best display on any…

Studio XPS 16 (M1640)

Released early January 2009, it features a 15.6-inch 720p or a 16.0-inch 1080p 16:10 aspect ratio screen. It is equipped with either a 512MB ATI Radeon HD 3670 or 1024MB ATI Radeon HD 4670…

Studio XPS 16 (M1645)

Featuring a quad core Intel Core i7 Clarksfield processor on an intel PM55 chipset mainboard and a 1GB ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4670 or 5730. Some of these XPS systems were found to have throttling…

Studio XPS 16 (M1647)

Featuring a dual core Intel Core i5 or Intel Core i7 Clarksfield processor. The M1647 motherboard still uses the Intel PM55 chipset (as the M1645) but overall the motherboard uses less power than…

Studio XPS Desktop

Combining the Studio's design with the XPS' performance, the Studio XPS desktop is a full-fledged multimedia center.

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