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Z88 (Swiss)

  1. Game infos
  2. Parent and Clones
  3. Sound
  4. Driver
  5. Inputs
  6. Controls
  7. Display
  8. Roms list
  9. BIOS set
  10. Chips list
  11. Categories
  12. History
Download z88ch.zip (0 B)
Snapshot

Game infos

Description Z88 (Swiss)
Name z88ch
Manufacturer Cambridge Computers
Year 1988
Runnable yes
System arcade /
Number of players Non-arcade
Added to MAME .146u2
Romset size 0 B
Romset file files
Romset zip 0 B
Genre Computer

Parent and clones

Parent z88 : Z88 (1988)

Sound infos

Sound_channels 1

Driver infos

Driver status preliminary
Driver emulation preliminary
Driver color good
Driver sound good
Driver graphic good
Driver cocktail
Driver protection
Driver savestate yes

Inputs infos

Input service no
Input tilt no
Input players 1
Input buttons
Input coins

Controls infos

type ways minimum maximum sensitivity keydelta reverse
keyboard no

Display infos

type rotate flipx width height refresh pixclock htotal hbend hbstart vtotal vbend vbstart
lcd 0 no 640 64 50

Roms list

console name bios size crc md5 merge sha1 region offset status optional
arcade z88v313he.rom v313ch 131072 a56d732c c2276a12d457f01a8fd2e2ac238aff2b5c3559d8 bios 0 good no

BIOS set

name description default
v313ch Version 3.13 Swiss yes

Chips list

name tag type clock
Filtered 1-bit DAC speaker audio
Speaker mono audio
Z80 maincpu cpu 3276800

Categories

History


Computer published 31 years ago:

Z88 (c) 1988 Cambridge Computers.

The Z88 was an A4-size, lightweight, portable Z80-based computer with a built-in combined word processing/spreadsheet/database application called PipeDream, along with several other applications and utilities, such as a Z80-version of the BBC BASIC programming language.

- TECHNICAL -

The Z88 is a portable computer weighing 0.9 kg, based on a low-power CMOS version of the popular Zilog Z80 microprocessor. It comes with 32 KiB of internal pseudo-static RAM and 128 KiB of ROM containing the operating system (called OZ). The memory can be expanded up to 3.5 MiB of RAM, the contents of which are preserved across sessions. An integrated capacitor prevents the Z88 from losing its data for the limited amount of time it takes to change the batteries.

The machine uses a membrane keyboard, which is almost silent in use; an optional electronic click can be turned on to indicate keystrokes. The Z88 is powered by four AA batteries, giving up to 20 hours of use. It has three memory card slots, which accommodate proprietary RAM, EPROM or FLASH cards, the third slot being equipped with a built-in EPROM programmer. Card capacities range from 32 KiB to 1 MiB.

The Z88 has a built-in 8-line, super-twisted LCD display, which has greater contrast than conventional twisted nematic LCDs.

The 64 KiB addressable by the Z80 processor are divided in four banks of 16 KiB each. The maximum memory of 4 MiB for the system is also divided in 256 segments of 16 KiB each. The hardware can map any of the 16 KiB blocks to any of the four banks. The first 512 KiB are reserved for ROM; the next 512 KiB are reserved for internal RAM. The next 3 MiB are assigned to each one of the three memory slots.

- TRIVIA -

The Z88 evolved from Sir Clive Sinclair's Pandora portable computer project which had been under development at Sinclair Research during the mid-1980s. The machine was launched at the Which Computer? Show on 17 February 1987

- CONTRIBUTE -

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