Difference between revisions of "C. Itoh CIT-220"
m |
m (description) |
||
| Line 29: | Line 29: | ||
| author=Clinton Wilder | | author=Clinton Wilder | ||
| date=October 7, 1985 | | date=October 7, 1985 | ||
| + | }} The lawsuit was settled with an agreement by C. Itoh to stop selling the CIT-220+ and change the format of its setup screens.{{Computerworld | ||
| + | | id=M8uwmICKZwMC | ||
| + | | page_prefix=RA8-PT | ||
| + | | page=1 | ||
| + | | title="DEC, C. Itoh end patent clash" | ||
| + | | author=Clinton Wilder | ||
| + | | date=August 31, 1987 | ||
}} | }} | ||
Revision as of 18:02, 16 November 2019
| C. Itoh CIT-220 | |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Manufacturer | C. Itoh |
| Model | CIT-220 |
| Lifetime | |
| Introduced | prior to August, 1985 |
| Communication | |
| Interface | RS-232C |
| Display | |
| Size | 12-inch |
| Character Modes | |
| Resolutions | 80x24, 132x24 |
| Firmware | |
| Personalities |
DEC VT52, DEC VT100, DEC VT220 |
The C. Itoh CIT-220 terminal was compatible with the DEC VT220. It was introduced sometime before August, 1985.
The CIT-220+ variant was introduced in August, 1985 at a price of $995. It included an enhanced keyboard compared to the CIT-220.[1]
DEC had alleged patent infringment by C. Itoh on the terminal, but lost a lawsuit in the matter.[2] The lawsuit was settled with an agreement by C. Itoh to stop selling the CIT-220+ and change the format of its setup screens.[3]
Images
References
- ↑ Systems & Peripherals, Terminals, Computerworld, August 12, 1985, pg. 83
- ↑ "DEC loses patent violation suit", Clinton Wilder, Computerworld, October 7, 1985, pg. 7
- ↑ "DEC, C. Itoh end patent clash", Clinton Wilder, Computerworld, August 31, 1987, pg. 1