Hardware
| Name Sort descending | Description |
|---|---|
| Tobi | An expansion board to provide DVI display, 10/100baseT Ethernet, USB Host, USB OTG, USB console and Stereo Audio to any Overo COM. |
| Tobi-Duo | An expansion board to embed inside a security or firewall appliance.Gumstix expansion board that adds 2 10/100baseT Ethernet ports. Ideal for security and firewall appliances. |
| TOMY Blip | Blip (stylized as Blip. THE DIGITAL GAME) is a tabletop electro-mechanical game marketed by Tomy starting in 1977 in the USA. The system can only play one two-player game that is very similar to… |
| Tomy Pyuuta Jr. | In 1982, Tomy of Japan decided to try their hand in the computer market. They introduced the Tomy Pyuuta (pronounced PYOOO-ta and means 'computer dude'). It garnered moderate success and… |
| TOSBAC 3400 | This was a computer for scientific/engineering computation which was completed at the end of 1963 based on the KT-Pilot, and announced in the following year. It employed the asynchronous… |
| TOSBAC DS/600 | These were Toshiba 32-bit super minicomputers developed to meet the needs of the advanced information society. The DS600 Series was marketed in 1981, and the enhanced DS6000 Series was marketed in… |
| TOSBAC DS/6060 | These were Toshiba 32-bit super minicomputers developed to meet the needs of the advanced information society. The DS600 Series was marketed in 1981, and the enhanced DS6000 Series was marketed in… |
| TOSBAC Kanji System 15 | This was Japan's first kanji (Chinese character) office computer, marketed by Toshiba in 1978. There were three models (the Model 10, 20 and 30) which were based on the TOSBAC System 15. These… |
| TOSBAC System 15 | The TOSBAC System 15 was an office computer(with a CRT, and was the first model to which Toshiba applied the name "Office Computer". (An office computer is a small business computer used in an… |
| TOSBAC System 35 | The TOSBAC System 35 was developed as the successor of the TOSBAC-1350 Model III, with the aim of enhancing hardware and improving functionality/performance while maintaining program and data… |
| TOSBAC System 55 | The TOSBAC System 35 was developed as the successor of the TOSBAC-1350 Model III, with the aim of enhancing hardware and improving functionality/performance while maintaining program and data… |
| TOSBAC UX300 | This was a desk-top UNIX computer for science and engineering, marketed by Toshiba in 1982. |
| TOSBAC UX300FII | This machine incorporated Japanese language functionality while retaining the structure of AT&T's UNIX version 7 (later called "UNIX System III"), and was the pioneer of Japanese language UNIX… |
| TOSBAC UX700 | This machine incorporated Japanese language functionality while retaining the structure of AT&T's UNIX version 7 (later called "UNIX System III"), and was the pioneer of Japanese language UNIX… |
| TOSBAC-1100E | The TOSBAC-1100E was Japan's first IC computer employing DTL (Diode Transistor Logic). The TOSBAC-1100 Series was the so-called external program type, which read in and executed programs punched… |
| TOSBAC-1150 System VI Sheet File System | This was Japan's first true floppy disk drive (FDD) based small business computer -- Marketed in 1974 by Toshiba. At the time, magnetic disk units had already begun to be used in small business… |
| TOSBAC-1350 | This was a small business computer marketed by Toshiba in 1973. It was equipped with a 2.45 megabyte capacity replaceable magnetic disk unit, and a low-noise dot matrix serial printer capable of… |
| TOSBAC-2100 | This was a transistor-based computer for business computation, developed by Tokyo Shibaura Electric in 1959. |
| TOSBAC-3100 | Although the TOSBAC-3100 was a general-purpose machine, it was designed particularly for scientific and engineering computation, and was equipped with an ALGOL compiler (WALT) developed with the… |
| TOSBAC-40A | The TOSBAC-40A was announced in September of 1970, but not long after, in December, Toshiba announced the TOSBAC-40B which expanded the instruction repertoire and added input/output channel… |
| TOSBAC-40C | The TOSBAC-40A was announced in September of 1970, but not long after, in December, Toshiba announced the TOSBAC-40B which expanded the instruction repertoire and added input/output channel… |
| TOSBAC-40D | The TOSBAC-40A was announced in September of 1970, but not long after, in December, Toshiba announced the TOSBAC-40B which expanded the instruction repertoire and added input/output channel… |
| TOSBAC-40L | The TOSBAC-40A was announced in September of 1970, but not long after, in December, Toshiba announced the TOSBAC-40B which expanded the instruction repertoire and added input/output channel… |
| TOSBAC-4200 | On the other hand, the TOSBAC-4200 was developed in 1961 as a dedicated computer for office computation. It used the same circuits as the TOSBAC-3100, magnetic tape for external memory, and… |
| TOSBAC-5100 | This was a mid-size business processing computer announced by Tokyo Shibaura Electric in 1965. It employed a horizontal microcode system based on a diode matrix. Three TOSBAC-5100 models were… |
| TOSBAC-5600 | In 1970, Tokyo Shibaura Electric domestically produced the GE635 large computer from the U.S. GE Corporation (later GE sold its computer business to Honeywell Information Systems (HIS), and the… |
| TOSBAC-7/70 | This was the first Japanese produced 32-bit industrial computer designed for large-scale real-time online applications, and it was announced by Toshiba in 1978. It was designed throughout for ease… |
| Toshiba "Toscal" BC-1411 | The BC-1411 appears to be the second calculator that Toshiba marketed, with the first machine being the BC-1001, introduced in December of 1965. The BC-1001 was a 10-digit, four function, fixed… |
| Toshiba 4700CT | The 4700CT is a 486-33 with 8MB RAM and a 320MB HDD. The model number is PA 1159E XXT with a serial number of 12420924E. |
| Toshiba AT300 | Weighing in at a comparatively light 590g, the Toshiba AT300 is comfortable to hold and its textured aluminium rear cover helps provide additional grip. Build quality is acceptable but not up to… |
| Toshiba BC 1010-BJ | The Toshiba BC 1010-BJ is an arithmetic calculator with 10 digits precision and algebraic logic. It has 6 functions, 20 keys and a VFD (vacuum fluorescent) display. The power source is 2xAA… |
| Toshiba BC-0801B | The Toshiba BC-0801B is an arithmetic calculator with 8 digits precision and algebraic logic. It has 4 functions, 17 keys and a VFD (vacuum fluorescent) display. The power source is 6xAA sealed.… |
| Toshiba BC-0802 | On a first glance the Toshiba BC-0802 looks like most other desktop calculators like the TI-3000, Canon L100S and the Heathkit IC-2008. |
| Toshiba BC-0804B | The Toshiba BC-0804B is an arithmetic calculator with 8 digits precision and algebraic logic. It has 4 functions, 17 keys and a VFD (vacuum fluorescent) display. The power source is 5xAA batteries… |
| Toshiba BC-0808B | The Toshiba BC-0808B is an arithmetic calculator with 8 digits precision and algebraic logic. It has 4 functions, 18 keys and a VFD (vacuum fluorescent) display. The power source is 4xAA batteries… |
| Toshiba BC-0811B | This Toshiba BC-0811B combined the keyboard technology of the BC-0808B with the housing of the BC-0804B and started the era of basic calculators with a fully independant memory. |
| Toshiba BC-1011 | The BC-0802 introduced soon after the BC-1011 makes already use of a single-chip calculator circuit. |
| Toshiba BC-1015 | The only suprise of this Toshiba BC-1015 desktop calculator is the TMS1073 calculator chip manufactured by Texas Instruments. It was used 4 years earlier already in the TI-5100. |
| Toshiba BC-1205B | The Toshiba BC-1205B is an arithmetic calculator with 12 digits precision and algebraic logic. It has 4 functions, 18 keys and an LED (light-emitting diode) display, typical of calculators of this… |
| Toshiba BC-1212 | The predecessor Toshiba BC-1212 was introduces in 1970 and gives comparable specifications. It lacks the LSI-IC's (Large-Scale-Integration Chips) and uses instead 38 of the SSI- and MSI-IC's. |
| Toshiba BC-1213 | The BC-1213 is another Toshiba model from the early 70s, significantly smaller than the BC-1624 , but a similar structure and also with Nixieanzeige. |
| Toshiba BC-1623G | Follow-on to the BC-1623 adding 30 steps of learn-mode programmability and an additional memory register. |
| Toshiba BC-1624 | The BC-1624 by Toshiba came in 1970 to market and cost in 1972 3895 DM + VAT. It measures 39 × 30 × 14 cm (L * W * H), weighs 5.4 kg without power cord and requires 12 W of power. |
| Toshiba BC-602L TOSCAL | The Toshiba BC-602L TOSCAL is an arithmetic calculator with 9 digits precision and algebraic logic. It has 7 functions, 20 keys and a VFD (vacuum fluorescent) display. The power source is 4xAA… |
| Toshiba BC-603L TOSCAL | The BC-603L is almost identical with the BC-602L introduced some month earlier. The only difference is the [SQR]-key instead the [%]-key. |
| Toshiba BC-8012 | The Toshiba BC-8012 is an arithmetic calculator with 8 digits precision and algebraic logic. It has 6 functions, 20 keys and a VFD (vacuum fluorescent) display. |
| Toshiba BC-8013 | The Toshiba BC-8013 followed the BC-8012 but uses a much smaller housing. This was accomplished by reducing the power supply from 4 AA-sized batteries to only 2 AA-cells and a neater layout of the… |
| Toshiba BC-8016 | The Toshiba BC-8016 is an arithmetic calculator with unknown digits precision and algebraic logic. It has an unknown number of functions, unknown keys and a VFD (vacuum fluorescent) display. The… |
| Toshiba BC-8018 | The Toshiba BC-8018 is an arithmetic calculator with 8 digits precision and algebraic logic. It has 7 functions, 20 keys and a VFD (vacuum fluorescent) display. The power source is 2xAA batteries… |
| Toshiba BC-8018B | The Toshiba BC-8018B is an arithmetic calculator with unknown digits precision and algebraic logic. It has 7 functions, 20 keys and a VFD (vacuum fluorescent) display. The power source is 2xAA… |
Contact Us
- Contact: Aaron C. Sylvan,
Board Chair - Address: IT History Society
534 Third Avenue
Suite 1248
Brooklyn, NY 11215 - Email: info@ithistory.org