TeleVideo

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TeleVideo Corporation is a U.S. company that achieved its peak of success in the early 1980s producing computer terminals. TeleVideo was founded in 1979 by K. Philip Hwang, a Utah State University graduate born in North Korea[1] who had run a business producing CRT monitors for arcade games since 1975. The company was headquartered in San Jose, California.

A TeleVideo terminal model 925 made around 1982[2]

TeleVideo's terminal protocol was popular in the early days of microcomputers and was widely supported by applications as well as terminal emulators (often referred to as "TeleVideo 925 emulation").[3]

TeleVideo also built CP/M-compatible 8-bit desktop and portable personal computers based on the Z80 processor. Up to sixteen of these machines could be connected to proprietary multi-user systems through serial interfaces.[4] In April, 1983, TeleVideo introduced an MS-DOS compatible personal computer based on the Intel 8088. This was introduced as the Model TS-1603 and included 128 KB RAM (expandable up to 256 KB), integrated monitor, modem and keyboard. The Model TS-1603 ran both MS-DOS 2.0 and CP/M-86 1.1.

The company later turned to manufacturing Windows compatible Thin client computers,[5] but eventually sold this business line to Neoware in October 2005.[6] The latter was subsequently taken over by Hewlett-Packard in 2007.[7]

On March 14, 2006, TeleVideo, Inc. filed a voluntary petition for reorganization under Chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code.[8]

A TeleVideo 965 terminal

After more than 35 years in business and with millions of terminals sold worldwide TeleVideo discontinued the manufacturing and sales of all terminal products as of September 30, 2011.[9]

Products

  • Terminals: TeleVideo 910, 912, 920, 920B, 920C, 925, 950, 955, 965, 970, 975, Personal Terminal
  • CP/M-86 systems: TeleVideo TS-1603, TS-800, TS-802, TS-803
  • TeleVideo TPC-1, a portable CP/M system similar to the Osborne-1
  • Early multi-user systems: TeleVideo TS-806 (6 users), TS-816 (16 users)[10]

References

  1. USU Alumni newsletter, Feb. 2004
  2. Installation and User's Guide, http://vt100.net/televideo/tvi925_ig.pdf
  3. e.g. Rogue Wave's HostAccess
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  8. Form 8-K filing
  9. http://www.televideo.com/
  10. www.vintagecomputer.net/televideo/ts-816/

External links