Difference between revisions of "DEC VT125"
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Revision as of 22:58, 18 January 2017
DEC VT125 | |
---|---|
Manufacturer | DEC |
Model | VT125 |
Lifetime | |
Introduced | July, 1981 |
Communication | |
Interfaces |
RS-232C, 20 mA current loop |
Baud Rates | 50, 75, 110, 134.5, 150, 200, 300, 600, 1200, 1800, 2000, 2400, 3600, 4800, 9600, 19200 |
Display | |
Size | 12-inch |
Phosphor | P4 white |
Character Modes | |
Resolutions | 80x24, 132x14 |
Matrix | 7x9 |
Graphic Modes | |
Type | PseudoColor |
Resolution | 768x240 |
Firmware | |
CPU | Intel 8080A |
Personalities |
DEC VT52, DEC VT100 |
Software Libraries | |
gnuplot Name | regis |
The DEC VT125 terminal was introduced in July, 1981.[1] It is a variant of the VT100 that includes a graphic display separate from the alphanumeric display. The graphics are displayed in a full bitmap manner instead of the waveform graphics used in the VT105.
A plug-in graphics board was available for the VT100 that would upgrade it to the VT125.[2]
Manx
- VT125 ReGIS Primer, May, 1982
- VT125 Graphics Terminal User Guide, June, 1982
- VT125 Field Maintenance Print Set, March, 1982
- RGL/11 Programmers Reference Manual, August, 1982
Computer History Museum Catalog
- 102654887 (Physical Object)
- 102759834 (Still Image)
- 102764517 (Still Image)
- 102756390 (Still Image)
- 102759646 (Still Image)
- 102759677 (Still Image)
- 102760136 (Still Image)
- 102759846 (Still Image)
- 102759662 (Still Image)
Images
References
- ↑ "Enhancements Give DEC Minc Graphics, Floating-Point Unit", Computerworld, August 31, 1981, pg. 47
- ↑ DEC Advertisement, Computerworld, November 9, 1981, pg. 106
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