This article on the Sharp MZ-80 was contributed by John Burns. * A wonderful machine at the time as a direct competitor to the Apple II and later machines. I first bought the MZ-80K in 1979 after a local shopkeeper asked me to find out "what it was as some salesman had left it with him to see if if sold". Remember the price - £470 - which was just about a month's wage at the time having just been promoted to an officer in the Merchant Navy. Having been used to an IBM System 7 running a simple navigation system on a ship he assumed I knew everything about computers. So having mastered the Japanese English and cartoon like manual I was well on the way. I inherited some money in around 1980 I then bought the MZ-80B along with all the peripherals that were available including the 2 x 5.25" inch disk drives, interface box, and printer. Cost around £1500 which was best part of 3 months wages. Also purchased CP/M and the "The Last One" - the program designed that you would never ever need another program. It built very concise programs from a series of templates. Many games and other utilities followed and I eventually used this as my main machine for work building a complete stock control system for a relative's shop all within 64KB. Other software from the likes of SharpSoft soon were added. Programming in Z80 assembler was a bit complicated but nothing like 64bit versions today. That early introduction to BASIC on the MZ-80K and later on the MZ-80B still exists today in the many systems I have built in Visual Studio including "Chippy's Haverhill" customer & delivery system. I still have both machines, the peripherals and all of the software on tape and disk some 30+ years later. Date : UnknownThis exhibit has a reference ID of CH40301. Please quote this reference ID in any communication with the Centre for Computing History. |
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