The TK-80 (μCOM Training Kit TK-80) was an 8080-based single-board computer kit developed by Nippon Electric Company (NEC) in 1976. It was originally developed for engineers who considered using the μCOM-80 family in their product. It was successful among hobbyists in late 1970s in Japan, due to its reasonable price and an expensive computer terminal not being required.
Developer | Tomio Goto, Akira Kato[1] |
---|---|
Manufacturer | NEC |
Type | Single-board computer |
Release date | August 3, 1976[2] |
Introductory price | ¥88,500 (equivalent to ¥151,735 in 2019) |
Units sold | 17,000 (As of October 1977) 26,000 (As of October 1978)[3] |
CPU | NEC μPD8080A 2.048 MHz |
Memory | ROM 768 bytes、RAM 512 bytes |
Display | 8 hexadecimal digits; 7-segment display |
Input | 25 keys |
Connectivity | 110 bit/s Serial I/O, 3 × 8 bits Parallel I/O |
Power | DC +5V 1.0 A, +12V 0.15 A |
Dimensions | 310(W) × 180(D) mm |
Successor | PC-8000 series |
History
editNEC started as a telecommunications equipment vendor, and their business was heavily dependent on Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Public Corporation (NTT). To increase private demand and exports, NEC began developing new industries such as computers and semiconductors in the 1950s. Although those businesses were not profitable enough, NEC continued investing profits from successful telecommunication business.
In the 1970s, the Semiconductor Division developed several microprocessors including Intel compatible processors, and in 1976 got a second-source agreement with Intel to produce the 8080 microprocessor legally. However, the division had trouble marketing them. In Japan, few engineers were interested in microprocessors, and NEC salesmen couldn't find what kind of demand would make much profit.[4]
In February 1976, the Semiconductor and Integrated Circuit Sales Division formed the Microcomputer Sales Section, and began to provide development environments for their microprocessors. Kazuya Watanabe (渡邊 和也), who was formerly manager of the Automation Promotion Section, became its section manager.[5] However, they visited customers and explained, but it was difficult for them to understand how to use a microprocessor. At the same time, NEC received an order from a laboratory in the Yokosuka Communication Institute of NTT that they wanted an educational microcomputer product for their new employees. Tomio Gotō (後藤 富雄), a member of the section, proposed to Watanabe developing an educational kit.[1][2] Based on this kit, the TK-80 was developed for general engineers and aimed to create a demand for microprocessors outside the industrial field.[5]
Gotō mainly designed the TK-80, and Akira Katō (加藤 明) did the detailed design work. Gotō got an idea from a photo of the KIM-1. The KIM-1 can monitor and show the current address by the software, but the display disappears when the CPU is hanging. The TK-80 has the Dynamic Display using the 555 timer IC and interrupt the CPU, it can always show the current address. In addition, the TK-80 has a CMOS battery. He decided to document its manual with a circuit diagram and assembly code of the debug monitor, influenced by the PDP-8 which was an open architecture and was used as an IC tester at NEC.[1][6][7]
The TK-80 came out on August 3, 1976. It was priced at 88,500 yen, an engineer's section manager could approve at that time. NEC had opened a support center (Bit-INN) at the Akihabara Radio Kaikan on September 13, 1976. They found many machines were sold to not only electrical engineers but also businessmen, hobbyists and students. The TK-80 was sold more than 2,000 units per month, despite 200 units expected.[2]
Soon after its success, other Japanese microprocessor manufacturers developed an evaluation kit for their microprocessor. Power supplies and other peripherals came out from third parties. Watanabe and his members wrote an introductory book Mi-com Introduction (マイコン入門) in July 1977, it became very popular and sold more than 200,000 copies.[1] Also, some computer magazines were founded, the ASCII, the I/O, the Monthly Mi-com (月刊マイコン) and the RAM.
When Kato worked for the help desk at Bit-INN, a doctor asked him how to use the TK-80 for calculating medical costs on the point system, and a store manager asked him whether it could process sales information. He noticed users were trying to use the TK-80 as a computer rather than a training kit. However, the TK-80 lacked memory and expandability to use for practical purposes. Around the same time, a third party manufacturer suggested an expansion board to provide TV output and a BASIC interpreter.[9] The TK-80BS was built upon that board, and was released in the end of 1977. Its BASIC was designed to fit in 4 KB of ROM, had the same as Li-Chen Wang's Tiny BASIC except some differences in functions and statements.[10] Its functions and speed didn't satisfy users. This led to the development of a new machine which became the PC-8001.[5][11]
In Japan, the Altair 8800 was sold in 1975, but not successful due to its high brokerage fee. Neither was the Apple II nor the Commodore PET.[12] Single-board computers had been popular until the successor PC-8001 came out in 1979.
Variants
editThe TK-80E was a cost-reduced version priced at 67,000 yen, introduced in 1977.[2] It contained the NEC μPD8080AF (2 MHz), fully compatible with the Intel 8080A. (The original μPD8080A has an incompatibility in the BCD adjustment, the μPD8080AF does not.). Other specifications included 768 B (Max. Up to 1 KB expandable) of ROM, and 512 B (Max. Up to 1 KB expandable) of RAM.
The TK-80BS was an expansion kit introduced in 1977.[13] It included a keyboard, a backplane and an expansion board for the TK-80 with 5 KB of RAM and 12 KB of ROM. It supported 8K BASIC.
The COMPO BS/80 was a fully assembled unit of the TK-80BS, introduced in 1978.[14] It was not a success because of its poor built-in BASIC and slow clock speed.[9]
The TK-85 was introduced in May 1980 and was the successor to the TK-80E. It contained the μPD8085AC processor (2.4576 MHz) and has a system configuration that is considered to some extent for compatibility with the TK-80. Other specifications included 2 KB (Max. Up to 8 KB expandable) of ROM, 1 KB of RAM, while the board size was 310 × 220 mm.
The PDA-80 was a development platform for NEC's microprocessors. It had the μPD8080A processor, 8 KB of RAM, a teleprinter interface and a self assembler for its processor.[15]
Literature
edit- μCOM-80トレーニング・キット TK-80E/80ユーザーズ・マニアル [μCOM-80 Training Kit TK-80E/80 User's Manual] (in Japanese), 日本電気株式会社 (NEC), IEM-560D
- 大内, 淳義 (1977). マイコン入門 [Mi-com Introduction] (in Japanese). 広済堂出版.
- NEC 1979 Catalog. Wellesley, MA: NEC Microcomputers, Inc. pp. 405–412. Retrieved 2020-07-16.
References
edit- ^ a b c d 関口, 和一 (2000). パソコン革命の旗手たち (in Japanese). 日本経済新聞社. pp. 35–39. ISBN 4-532-16331-5.
- ^ a b c d 太田, 行生 (1983). パソコン誕生 (in Japanese). 日本電気文化センター. pp. 20–35. ISBN 4-930916-11-9.
- ^ 日本電気社史編纂室 (2001-12-25). 日本電気株式会社百年史 (in Japanese). NEC. p. 651.
- ^ 日本電気社史編纂室 (2001-12-25). 日本電気株式会社百年史 (in Japanese). NEC. pp. 649–661.
- ^ a b c 田中, 繁廣 (1988-02-17). "ドキュメント・NECのPC戦略―市場制覇への道を切り拓いた戦士達 その決断と挑戦の歴史". 100万人の謎を解く ザ・PCの系譜 (in Japanese). コンピュータ・ニュース社. pp. 76–89. ISBN 4-8061-0316-0.
- ^ 塩田, 紳二 (1998). "国産銘機列伝:開発者インタビュー「オープンの発想はPDP-8から学んだ―TK-80開発者、後藤氏に聞く」". ASCII (in Japanese). 22 (5). ASCII Corporation: 314. ISSN 0386-5428.
- ^ 劉, 尭 (2019-08-05). "日本パソコン史のはじまりとも言える、NEC PC-8001の誕生を振り返る". PC Watch (in Japanese). Impress Corporation. Retrieved 2019-09-22.
- ^ 日本電気社史編纂室 (2001-12-25). 日本電気株式会社百年史 (in Japanese). NEC. p. 263.
- ^ a b 加藤, 明 (2011-06-01). "J-STAGE : 電子情報通信学会 通信ソサイエティマガジン : Vol. 2010 No. 15 : PC-8001の開発" (PDF) (in Japanese). 電子情報通信学会. doi:10.1587/bplus.2010.15_58. Retrieved 2016-11-07.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - ^ "TK-80BS". ASCII (in Japanese). 2 (1). ASCII Corporation. 1978. ISSN 0386-5428.
- ^ 田中, 繁廣 (1988-02-17). "NECのハード開発戦略―ユーザーをとらえた「互換性と継承性の追求」優先の製品開発". 100万人の謎を解く ザ・PCの系譜 (in Japanese). コンピュータ・ニュース社. pp. 94–105. ISBN 4-8061-0316-0.
- ^ 塩田, 紳二 (1998). "国産銘機列伝:History「マイコンと呼ばれていた頃」". ASCII (in Japanese). 22 (5). ASCII Corporation: 312–313. ISSN 0386-5428.
- ^ "マイクロコンピューター・総カタログ". マイクロコンピューターのすべて (in Japanese). サンポウジャーナル. 1978.
- ^ "パーソナル・コンピュータ 新製品ガイド". ASCII (in Japanese). 2 (11). ASCII Corporation: 39. 1978. ISSN 0386-5428.
- ^ 堀部, 潔; 鈴木, 将成 (1980). 増補改訂 マイクロコンピュータ活用事典 (in Japanese). テクノ. pp. 333–335.
External links
edit- "TK 80 : OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : The Museum". Retrieved 2016-11-07.
- "TK-80-Computer Museum". Information Processing Society of Japan. Retrieved 2016-11-07.
- "Remembrance of TK - 80: TK - 80 BS BASIC Station". Studio RUM blog. Retrieved 2018-11-02. (Japanese language)
- "Specification of TK-80 / 80E (from the catalog of the time)". Denno/Dynamic Museum. Retrieved 2018-11-02. (Japanese language. Photos & overview plus pages for TK-80BS & COMPO BS/80.)
- "IC Collection entry for TK-80 models". IC Collection. Retrieved 2018-11-02. (Japanese language. Photos for TK-80 & detailed overview for TK-80 models.)
- "Akademeia entry for TK-80BS". Security Akademeia. Retrieved 2018-11-02. (Japanese language. Photos & overview for TK-80BS (BASIC STATION).)
- "Funky Goods entry for TK-85". Funky Goods. Retrieved 2018-11-02. (Japanese language. Photos & overview for TK-85, and specifications comparison chart with TK-80.)
- "IC Collection entry for TK-85". IC Collection. Retrieved 2018-11-02. (Japanese language. Photos & overview for TK-85.)