Difference between revisions of "Jupiter 7 Plus"
m (infobox) |
m (categories, stub) |
||
| Line 41: | Line 41: | ||
[[Category:Jupiter|7 Plus]] | [[Category:Jupiter|7 Plus]] | ||
| + | [[Category:PseudoColor]] | ||
[[Category:Graphics]] | [[Category:Graphics]] | ||
[[Category:Color]] | [[Category:Color]] | ||
{{category raster}} | {{category raster}} | ||
[[Category:1983]] | [[Category:1983]] | ||
| + | {{stub}} | ||
Revision as of 04:09, 24 July 2018
| Jupiter 7 Plus | |
|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Jupiter |
| Model | 7 Plus |
| Lifetime | |
| Introduced | May, 1983 |
| Introductory Price | $15,200 |
| Communication | |
| Interface | RS-232C |
| Graphic Modes | |
| Type | PseudoColor |
The Jupiter 7 Plus is an enhanced version of the Jupiter 7 color graphics terminal introduced in May, 1983 at a price ranging from $15,200 to $19,000, depending on options.[1][2]
Features:
- antialiased vectors
- antialiased proportional character fonts
- eight 1Kx1K memory planes
- 256 displayable colors from palette of 16.7 million
- high-speed graphics generation, zoom, pan, scroll
- hardware tri-level blue grid for faster layout
- fully programmable keyboard
- dual joysticks
- built-in sound synthesizer
- pixel block-moving system can shift any operator-defined shape at 1M bit/sec
- supported peripherals:
- digitizer tablet
- 125-color inkjet printer
- options:
- high-speed parallel interface
References
- ↑ "Color Graphics Terminal Offered by Jupiter Systems", Computerworld, May 9, 1983, pg. 65
- ↑ "Jupiter 7 Plus Released, Has More Options", Computerworld, July 18, 1983, pg. 68
| This article is a stub. You can help the Terminals Wiki by expanding it. |