Difference between revisions of "Jupiter 7"
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| manufacturer = Jupiter | | manufacturer = Jupiter | ||
| model = 7 | | model = 7 | ||
| − | | image = | + | | image = Jupiter_7_Brochure.jpg |
| intro_month = May | | intro_month = May | ||
| intro_year = 1982 | | intro_year = 1982 | ||
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==[[Manx]]== | ==[[Manx]]== | ||
* {{manx details|132,21721|Jupiter 7 Brochure}}, January, 1982 | * {{manx details|132,21721|Jupiter 7 Brochure}}, January, 1982 | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==Images== | ||
| + | <gallery> | ||
| + | File:Jupiter_7.jpg | ||
| + | </gallery> | ||
{{References}} | {{References}} | ||
Revision as of 20:02, 7 October 2016
| Jupiter 7 | |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Manufacturer | Jupiter |
| Model | 7 |
| Lifetime | |
| Introduced | May, 1982 |
| Communication | |
| Interfaces |
RS-232C, host DMA |
| Display | |
| Size | 14-inch or 19-inch |
| Graphic Modes | |
| Type | PseudoColor |
| Resolution | 768x575 |
| Firmware | |
| Personalities | Tektronix 4014 |
The Jupiter 7 is a color graphics terminal introduced in May, 1982.[1][2]
Features:
- 768x575 pixel resolution
- 256 displayable colors
- detached keyboard
- 30 user-definable keys
- hexadecimal keypad
- twin joysticks for independent pan, scroll and zoom
- anti-aliased vectors
- PLOT 10
- supported I/O devices:
- graphics tablets
- foot pedal
- track ball
Manx
- Jupiter 7 Brochure, January, 1982
Images
References
- ↑ "Color Terminal Fits AED 512", Computerworld, May 10, 1982, pg. 85
- ↑ Hardware News, New peripherals, InfoWorld, July 5, 1982, pg. 87