HP Voyager Kinomi - Printable Version +- HP Forums (https://www.hpmuseum.org/forum) +-- Forum: Not HP Calculators (/forum-7.html) +--- Forum: Not quite HP Calculators - but related (/forum-8.html) +--- Thread: HP Voyager Kinomi (/thread-12357.html) |
HP Voyager Kinomi - Leviset - 02-04-2019 02:58 PM Forgive me all for only becoming a Calcunut in the last 3 years at the age of now 70. I started my first paid job in IT way back in 1979, coding on an HP-97. However things got overtaken by being in the vanguard of the PC revolution and the use of CP/80,86 and installing the Company I worked for first real business PC - a Victor Technology Sirius 1 designed by Chuck Peddle in 1982 (of interest for some we paid £2,400 it and its spec was - Intel 8088 (5Mhz) processor, 800 x 600 green & white screen, No hard drive just 2 x 720k 5¹/₄ diskette drives (for the engineers amongst us it had variable speed floppy disk drives!) and I seem to Remember 128 - 896 kB of RAM. The following year (1983) we bought an external 10Mb (yes 10 Megabytes) hard drive for just £3,000. On to my actual post I found an old link from 2012 in the forum about the HP Voyager Kinomi - did this ever come to fruition as an actual calculator or was a workable emulator/simulator ever released for Windows or OSX? Dennis RE: HP Voyager Kinomi - Harald - 02-04-2019 09:46 PM (02-04-2019 02:58 PM)Leviset Wrote: On to my actual post I found an old link from 2012 in the forum about the HP Voyager Kinomi - did this ever come to fruition as an actual calculator or was a workable emulator/simulator ever released for Windows or OSX? I don't believe it was ever made available. Which is a shame, I definately would have been interested. RE: HP Voyager Kinomi - Dan - 02-06-2019 06:53 AM (02-04-2019 02:58 PM)Leviset Wrote: Victor Technology Sirius 1 designed by Chuck Peddle in 1982 (of interest for some we paid £2,400 it and its spec was - Intel 8088 (5Mhz) processor, 800 x 600 green & white screen, No hard drive just 2 x 720k 5¹/₄ diskette drives (for the engineers amongst us it had variable speed floppy disk drives!) and I seem to Remember 128 - 896 kB of RAM. The following year (1983) we bought an external 10Mb (yes 10 Megabytes) hard drive for just £3,000. Fascinating, the days before Moore's Law came to an end |