Difference between revisions of "Lear Siegler ADM-3A"

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The terminal was created by Dennis J. Cagan and 3 other engineers at LSI.  In 1975, these engineers left Lear Siegler to form [[:Category:Soroc|Soroc Technology]].  The first product from Soroc was a design similar to the ADM-3A, which was sold to [[:Category:Beehive|Beehive]] as the [[Beehive B100]] in 1976-1977.<ref>[http://www.old-computers.com/site/header/terminal.asp "Lear-Siegler Terminal"], old-computers.com, fetched on March 15, 2012</ref>
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The terminal was created by Dennis J. Cagan and 3 other engineers at LSI.  In 1975, these engineers left Lear Siegler to form [[:Category:Soroc|Soroc Technology]].  The first product from Soroc was a design similar to the ADM-3A, which was sold to [[:Category:Beehive|Beehive]] as the [[Beehive B100]] in 1976-1977.<ref>{{cite web
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| url=http://www.old-computers.com/site/header/terminal.asp
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| title=Lear-Siegler Terminal
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== [[BitSavers]] ==
 
== [[BitSavers]] ==

Revision as of 21:56, 15 April 2012

Lear Siegler ADM-3A
Manufacturer Lear Siegler
Model ADM-3A
Lifetime
Introduced July, 1976
Introductory Price $1,045

The Lear Siegler ADM-3A terminal is an expanded version of the ADM-3 terminal. It was introduced in July, 1976 at a price of $1045. The ADM-3A adds direct cursor addressing. A graphics option was available in May, 1982 at a price of $1,050.[1][2]

The terminal was created by Dennis J. Cagan and 3 other engineers at LSI. In 1975, these engineers left Lear Siegler to form Soroc Technology. The first product from Soroc was a design similar to the ADM-3A, which was sold to Beehive as the Beehive B100 in 1976-1977.[3]

BitSavers

References